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Sharpshooter nails hijacker
, SAN JOSE, Calif. (UP!)A few minutes earlier, the
A po!Jce sharpshooter early
gunman,
whom police
today shot and killed a
refused to identify, had shot
gunman as he stood In the one of his hostages In the leg
doorway of a parked Con- with a .33-ca!iber revolver as
..~ental m jetliner he had · he tried to Dee the aircraft.
.hoped to hijack with three
The other hostage !'SC9ped
hostages.
uninjured and, at that point,
the would-be skyjacker
. "He was shot in the head seized mechanic Alden
and killed instantly by one of Un"'kugle, 40, of San Jose,
our local SWAT team men and held him inside the
with a rifle," Lt. Don Trujillo aircraft while officers yelled
. said.
for him to come out wlth his

OFFICERS AND ADVISOR - The Tri-M Society
officers and advisor of Southern High School, left to right,
are Mrs. Lee Lee, advisor; Denise Hendrix , vice
Jll'esident; Lisa Allen, treasurer; Bobbi Cha pman ,
secretary;, Rhonda West, historian, and Lee Ord,

president . The club plans an active year. To begin the
season they have engaged a rock group 11Star" from
Columbus, to be at the high school on Sept 23, from 1 to 2
p.m. for the student body or anyone interested in attending . Admission is 50 cents.

Small businessmen offered

LeMaster fund
reaches $1,519

OU sessions one per week
ATHENS
Weekly
sessions on managing a small
business will be held at Ohio
University Oct. 9 through
Nov. 20 for owner-managers
and employers of retailing,
manufacturing and service
businesses throughout the
region.
Topics to be covered in the
Thursday night sessions
include
developing
a
marketing plan, motivating

employes, accountin g
records, financial sources
available
for
small
businessmen, and individual
company problems and
needs.
The ·seven-week program
will be staffed by Dr. Victor
Grieco, OU professor of
business administration;
Lucian Spataro, professor of
management; Joanne
L'Heureux, co-own e rmanager of the Athens
Boarding Kennel and a
systems analyst at Ohio
University: and William
Biehl, president of the Athens

Cham her of Commerce and
owner of Biehl Sa fety Service
which specializes in glass
installation.
People who . are contemplating the opening of a
business and personnel from
non-profit, edu cationa l ,
governmental and medical
agencies should also find the
program of interest.
The fee for instr uctional
materials and tuition is $85
with special discoun ts fo r OU
alwnni and For businesses

NO ONE BLAMED
GALLIPOLIS - No one
was injured or cited in a two
vehicle collision at 8:53a.m.
Friday on State St. City police
said Patty Ann Jones, 31, of
Rodney, attempted to pass a
city dump truck and her car
struck a vehicle driven by
Lois Jane Reimund, 30, of
Gallipolis. There was minor
damag e.

se nding more tha n one
participant.
Sponsors of the program
along with the Wliversity are
the Small Bus in ess Admi nistration cind the Athens
Cha mber of Commerce.
Further details can be obta ined from the workshops
office, 301 Tupper Hall. Ohio
University, Athens , Oh io
45701.
RESPECT DEMANDED
DALLAS I UP!) - Former
Treasur y Secretary John
Conally sa id Saturday the
United States needs a tougher
forei gn policy , one that would
use the c ountry's trading
power as leverage to win
some respect from America 's
fo1·eign critics. " I think the
time has come for the United
Stales to reappraise its
foreign policy and stop being
everybody's patsy," Connally
said in a prepared address
before
the
National
Federation of Republican
Women.

POMEROY - A public
fund drive for Lonnie
LeMa s ter, 6, Route 2,
Pomeroy, brain surgery
patient at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg , has
reached $1519.09.
Latest contributors to the
fund are Kenneth Wiggins,
Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth E . Harris, Route 3,
Pomeroy, the Hemlock Grove
Church and an anonymous
contribution from Cheshire
Route I.
Mi ss Eleanor Robson,
Meigs County Recorder, is
accepti ng contributions
which can be mailed to her
office or left there .

TWO WfN DEGREES
POMEROY - Two Meigs
Co unt y residents received
degrees at the autumn
commencement ceremonies
of Ohio State University held
Aug. 29 in St. John Arena.
They are Don Mitchell Anderson, bachelor or science in
natura l resources, and Anita
Marie Fultz, ba c helor of
science in horne economics.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday: Fair Wednesday,
chance of showers Thursday, ending Friday. Hig~•
In the 70s and low 80s. Lows
In lbe 50s.

ARTIST'S CONCEPfiON OF PROPOSED additions to Southern High School at Racine is by Vargo and
Cassiday Architects, Marietta, Ohio.

RACINE - The Ohio State
Board of Education, ;Nhich
approved Southern Local
Board's request to place
before its voters a 3.85 mill
levy on the November 4
ballot, gave the voters of
Southern the opportunity to
upgrade their hi gh school
faciliti es so that s tate
minimum s tandard s for
secondary schools can be
met.
A statement authorized by
the district board
of
education stressed:
Upon co mpletion of its
minimum
standa rds '
evaluation of Southern High
School last October 24, the
State
Department
of
Education found several
areas deficient. Among those
areas found inadequate or not
provided were: Library,
health services, g uidance,
instructional material center,

~udio-visual

center,

art,

physical education, the
combined industrial artsvocational
agriculture
laboratory, a nd special
ed ucation.
The existing facility,
though relatively new, was
built to accommodate the
19:&gt;8 minimum stan dards
which have been greatly

modified l n recent years. The
Southern Local Board of
Education was notified by the
State
Department
of
Education on January 2, 1975,
that, " it is imperative that
the local board of education,
citizenry, and administration
take immediate and positive
corrective steps if interest

prevails

to

maintain

a

secondary attendance center
in the Southern Local School
District."
Last January 20, a committee made up of citizens, a
board member, and staff was
appointed by the Southern
Board to study the present
high school facilities and its
needs in te rms of meeting the

mandated minimum standards.
On April 17, this committee
recommended to the board
that new construction was
necessary if the state
minimum standards were to
be met. After careful consideration of the committee's
recommendation and of its
responsibility to the people,
the Southern Baaed decided
to place before the citizenry a
bond levy on the November
ballot. Thus, the people to
whom the school belongs,
would have the opportunity to

improve their high schooL
The levy will generate
$420,000 ove r a 20-year
period. It will provide for

::;: was presented by Sen. Oakley Collins Sunday evening at the Chester Academy. Speaking at

Weather
Cloudy, chance of showers,
not quite as cool tonight and
Tuesday. Lows tonight in low
~ ; highs Tuesday, low 70s .
Probability of rain 20 per cent
today, 30 per cent tonight and
Tuesday.

these areas: an instructional
resource media center that
will replace the library; the
present library space will be
used for special education; a
new music facility that will
provide for a broader music
program; the present music
area will be utilized for health
services, physical education
and girls' athletics; a new
vocational agricultural
facility ,that will be separate
fr om the industrial arts area;
by
separating
these
programs from the same
area, not only will they meet
the minimum standards, but
it will proviqe an area for art
which can then be added to
th~ curriculum; a new section of bleachers for the high
school gym-auditorium to
replace a section that is old
and inoperable.
The cost of replacing these
bleachers from Board funds
is prohibitive without taking
money away from existing

program.

:t:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::

enttne

the ad-

ministrative offices at the
high sc hool, a guidance
facility can be had that meets

VOL XXVII

TilE FATE OF THIS THREE-MONTH-OLD PUPPY

will depend upon a veterinarian who will examine it
State Farm has economical cov erage for rour mobile hOme a'nd
contents. ia bil ity protectiOn fOf'
you . Many optional extras- meet
yow specilic needs. And of eourse,
you can depend on the best
ser&gt;~ice. Call for deta ils .
•

CARROL K. SNOWDEN
State St.
Gallipolis
446-4290, Home 446-4511

MADRID (UP!) - Two
bands
of
Palestinian
guerrillas seized the Egyp·
tian Embassy and the offices
of the Arab League today and
threatened to kill Egyptian
Ambassador Mahmoud Abdel
Ghaffar and four other Arab

today. The puppy, found abandoned on a dump in the
Nease Settlement area, is being cared for by the Meigs
County Humane Society. Another animal was reported
abandoned Saturday afternoon at a dump in the Snowville
area. If the veterinarian feels that this pup is healthy
enough, it will be put up for adoption. If not , it will be
disposed of.

24

Ukt 1 grJDd n1ighbor,
St1t1 F1m il ~r..

News . . . in Briefs~\

INJUUNCI

·!·'!

~

STATE FARM GtNERALINSURANCE COMPAifY

fiorne Olliu
p 7408

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Oloom ingloo,ll linoil

United Press International
~ MayQl' Ralph J. Perk has termed compulsory school busing " an attempted cure which instead
spreads racial hatred" and given orders to involve the city in
an NACCP suit that seeks to desegregate city schools through
busing.
Cleveland Law Director James B. Davis said he would ask
U.S. District Court Judge Frank J. Battisti to designate the
city a codefendant in the 1973 suit against the local and state
school boards. "Court-ordered school busing is an attempted
cure which Instead spreads racial hatred," Perk said Saturday, citing violence, racial polarity and disruption of city
opera!ionsover busing in wulsville and Boston in his decision .

G:LEVELAND

r-.;

Love seat and matching chair at sale prices. Also many
other Kroehler love seats, sofas and chair just arrived
and at sale prices right now. Be sure to see the excellent
line of Kroehler coffee tables and end tables styled to go
with your Kroehler living room furniture.

$

CLEVELAND - Cleveland's 48,951 acres were sprayed
with malathion by airplane Sunday to rid the city of
mosquitoes suspected of carrying St. wuis e~cephalitis.
The decision to spend $28,000 for the aerial spraying was
made by Mayor Ralph J . Perk because of five confirmed and
42 suspected cases of the disease in the metropolitan area.
Cleveland Environmental Health Commissioner Boyd Marsh
said the spraying would kill about 95 per cent of the mosquitoes
and inhibit their growth in 1976.
DETROIT - ANALYSTS SAY EARLY SEPTEMBER
new car sales reports will confirm what auto executives have
proclaimed recently- that the worst is over for the depressed
industry. Industry analysts said reports due today from the
four U.S. carmakers will show sales 14 per cent below a year
· ago, but equal to the same period in 1973 just before the Arab
oil embargo sent the industry into a two--year slump.
Sales were expected to reach about 140,000 cars and could
go as high as 145,000. The higher figure would surpass 1973 and
put this year's Sept. 1-10 period on the books as the fifth best in
history. However, there still were signs that all is not well with
the Industry.
wng-term layoffs today still numbered 81,600 workers out
of the industry's blue collar force to 700,000. Because of the
switch to 1976--model production, temporary layoffs climbed
from 3,025 last week to 14,275 today.

WASHINGTON - CXJUNTERFEITERS, like everyone
else, are aware that the price of abnost everything is going up.
So they're printing bigger bllls.
Although the bogus $20 bill is still ''most popular," says
Secret Service Director H. Stuart Knight, more ~ and $100
counterfiet bllls are being printed nowadays. Practically no
one is bothering to counterfeit coins.

ea.

Take time to browse around through the furniture department.
You'll like the new bedroom, living room, dining room furniture on
display. Milttresses and springs, infants furniture. easy chairs.
pictures, lamps, pianos. You'll enjoy it ._

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, THIRD FLOOR .

s p.m ..
..

OY

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1975

PRICE 15'

------------------------~~~~~~~~~--------~~~

threaten to kill officials

likes to eat,
another shortage is shaping up that may sock epicures in their
collective midsections - and their pocketbooks. The natural
wild rice crop virtually was wiped out this year in Mirmesota,
where about 90 per cent of the country's crop is produced.
Heavy spring rains that devastated the Red River Valley
also drowned much of what had appeared to be a bumper wild
rice crop growing in rivers and lakes - the second straight
year the crop has been da.rilaged by a weather quirk. In 1974,
frost was the culJll'it. Production may be off as much as 50 per
cent. What ther~ is of it may go up as much as a dollar a pound.

-I MP

NO. 107

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programs.
By rearranging

Devoted To The Interests of The Meigs·Mllson Arell

sr. PAUL, MINN. - IN A NATION THAT

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[&lt; KROEHL£R. QUALITY ~
LIVING ROOM STYLES ~

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',._':,_:·,.:_'_,_: the ceremmies,Millwhen andBicentennkiai certificate wahes also presented, were _Sen . Collins,
Cong. Clarence · er a Fran Vaughan, who has en active in the Amencan Legion's
Americanism Program many years. The invocation was by the Rev . W. H. Middieswarth
· · and ihe Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, presented the colors. Pictured with the
::_::. flag, 1-c, are Cong. Mlller, Henry Wells, Bernard Gilkey and Warden Ours (Meigs County
Commissioners) and Sen. Collins. The Chester site was selected for the presentation
because the courthouse at Chester is the only original courthouse in Ohio still standing. The
·.·. Academy was built about the sametime,in 1923.

•

the state minimum stan. ·
dards.
.,
School officials said they,,
will be pleased to meet wit!)
groups who want to know
more about the new bulldii!J

THE SAVINGS EVENT OF THE YEAR

·Open Monday; Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 9 :30 to
Friday and Satun;tay 9:30 to 8 p.m.
·
·

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Southern proposes .upgrading schoo{

,.

·SOFAS

described only as a San Jose get an aircraft . He picked up
white man In his an., stabbed · another hostage and drove to
a woman In the heart Sunday Municipal Airport, where he
night. The unidentified found the 727.
woman was taken to a
Police were withholding
hospital, where she was identification of the wounded
reported in critical condition woman and the gunman until
but expected to survive.
relatives could be notified.
Newsmen who went to the
The gunman then seized a
man and took him to Reid- airport were kept away from
Hillview Airport but failed to the scene by police .

..'

ELBERFELDS

YOUR CHOICE

hands up.
'"'bere was no possibllity
that the plane cOUld have
been flown," TruJillo said.
He ezplained that officers
shot out the tires ahd- Undekugle thus was Unable to
obey the hijacker's order to
fly the air'craft.
Pollee said the scenario
began when the gunman,

•

LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. - FEARING IT was "in
trouble with Congress," · the Appalachian Regional Commission has voted to, put an April 15 deadline on utilizing
federal funds allocated for special projects of individual
states.
_ Mississippi Gov. William L. Waller, commission chairman and NOrth Carolina Gov. •James E. Holshouser urged the
deacWnefor each state ·to use ita allocation or lose it to another
-state. "We're in trouble with. Congress now because we dilly. dallied with funds, and this might help," Waller said at a
meeting of-the commission Sunday at the Southern Governors'
Conference.

officials unless the Egyptian
delegation leaves Geneva
before signing the peace
agreement with Israel.
Riot
pollee
wearing
helmets and armored vests
and carrying submachine
guns surrounded the embassy

Two accidents investigated
Meigs County Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
investigated one accident
Sunday and one this morning.
No personal injuries were
reported.
At4 : 2ap. m. in Letart Twp.
on SR 338, Timothy W.
Wickersham, 16, traveling
south toward Letart Falls,
had his drive shaft drop from
the car's transmission. The
car went off the road to the

left and hit a utility pole .
There was medium damage.
No citation was made.
This morning at 7:55 in
Scipio Twp. on SR 143 Paul J .
Hatfield, 17, Dexter, pulled
off the highway and back onto
the highway in front of a car
driven by Ellen M. Luebke,
22, Wisconsin . The accident is
still under investigation.
There was medium property
damage.

press sec retary if the
Egyptian delegation had not
left the Swiss city by midnight.
They threatened to blow up
th e building if police attacked.
Spaniards in the embassy
building were freed, police
said .
The Palestinian raiders at
the Arab league officers were
holding the organization's
director, Alxlel Rahman a!
Tuhami, and his secretary
hostage, the Spanish news
agency Cifra said.
Contacted by telephone in
the press attache's office, a
spokesman
for
the
Palestinians told UP! if
police attempted to interfere
they would blow up the
embassy building .
The spokesman said the

band consisted of five armed
men.
A
government
spokesman said there were
four, and the national news
agency Citra spoke of "three
Palestinans armed with

guns."
In Cairo, a spokesman for
President Anwar Sadat said
the
Egyptian
Foreign
Ministry was in close contact
with Spanish authorities.
The spokesman said the
name used by the com-

The Tri.County Corvette
Owners Assn. will be known
as "MGM Corvette, Inc.,"
with the initials representing
Mason, Gallia and Meigs
counties.
The name was selected and
the bOard of directors of the
new organization named by
secret ballots counted a
meeting Sept. 9 at the Appalachian
Power
Co.
Auditorium ' in
Point
Pleasant.
Officers elected were Paul
Washington, Letart, W. Va.,
president; Jacki Case,
Cheshire, vice president;
Yvonne Scally, Middleport,
treasurer, and Frank Case,
Chester, secretary. Board
members are Bill Wilson,
Point Pleasant; Danny
Spurlock, Tuppers Plains;
Steve
Morris,
Point
Pleasant;
Tom Smith,
Gallipolis; Delbert Rees, Rio
Grande, and Doug Enoch,

have voting rights in the
National Council through the
club governor .
Plans are now being made
for the local group to hold a
car display at the Silver
Bridge Shopping Plaza .
There will be a meeting at the
Hill House in Parkersburg, at
7 p.m . Sept. 16 to plan West
Virginia Week as designated
by the NCCC.
The NCCC has given the
first week of November to the
Corvette Club of West
Virginia. This means that

during the week no other
Corvette event can be held
without the approval of the
NCCC Council.
The planning meeting will
be attended by the central
West Virginia Corvette Club,
Clarksburg;
the
West
Virginia Corvette Club of
Wheeling-Moundsville; the
Kanawha Valley Corvette
Club, Charleston; Biennerhassett Corvette Assn.,
Parkersburg, and the MGM
Corvette group of the tricoWJty area.

The five Corvette clubs will
combine their resources to
present a car show, rally and
auto cross. The event will be
hosted by the five NCCC
affiliated clubs. Any Corvette
owner in the United States
and Canada can take part in
the event to be held at the
Grand Central Shopping Mail
in Vienna, W.Va. The event is
expected to be the largest
meet and show of Corvettes
ever held in West Virginia.
The event will be publicized
locally and nationally after

By PEfER A. BROWN
BOSTON (UP!) - Attendance, especially among
whites previously boycotting
classes, appeared to increase

and
details
final
arrangements have been
completed. The involvement
of the MGM Corvette' in an
event of this magnitude wlll
be very beneficial for future
activities of the local club,
officials concluded.
The next regular meeting
of the MGM group will be at
the Holiday Inn, Kanauga,
Room A, at 8 p .m. on Sept . .23.
Any Corvette owner may
attend the meeting but should
contact one of the club officers in advance .

Racine.
A club emblem has been
discussed and a design
suggested. Papers are being
prepared to incorporate as a
non-profit organization in the
slates of Ohio and West
Virginia. A club constitution
also is under study. It will be
up for ratification at the next
regular meeting.
Paul
Washlngoon was selected as
club governor .to the !'lational
Council . of Corvette Clubs,
Inc. One governor from ea~h
club in the United States
attends bi-monthly meetings.
Purpose of this council is to
promote,
inform
and
establish rules. common · to
Corvette Clubs of the United
States. Nationally the group
has 7400 members in 225
clubs. The next regular
meeting will be Sept. 20 at the
Holiday Inn, Cincinnati when
the MGM Corvettes will be
recognize~ as an affiliate and

THIS MARKER ON THE GRAVE of Capt. Joseph C.
McElroy at the Greenwood Cemetery in Racine was
unveiled during ceremonies Sunday afternoon. The event
was sponSored by the Meigs County Bicentennial C ~m­
mission with John•Rice, president, master of ceremonies,
and the Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society .
Over 15 members of the McElroy family attended the
. event which was followed by reception for more than 100
persons at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Huston ,
Syracuse . The Hustons have restored the Bridgeman

a

\

mandos, " The Group of the
Fallen Abdel Kader al
Houseni," had surfaced "two
or three times" in the past.
Spokesmen for the principal Palestinian guerrilla
organizations in Beirut
claimed today they knew
nothing about the commando
group.
al
Houseni
was
a
Palestinian leader killed in a
clash with a Jewish group in
1947.

Whites returning

Corvette owners launch Tri-Co club

0

I

building in Velasquez street
and the Arab League office on
Acala, both in the city center
about a half mile apart.
fn the embassy, the gunmen held two other diplomats
besides the ambassador , and
they held two other Arab
officials hostage in the Arab
League offices.
About 20 police were seen
trying to enter the building,
but they later withdrew,
apparently to make room for
mediators.
The ambassadors of
Kuwait, Algeria, and Iraq.
each with several aides,
entered the building shortly
after 1 p.m. to negotiate with
the guerrillas.
The Palestinians issued a
statement to the press saying
they would kill the ambassador, his consul and his

home in Syracuse, frequently visited by Capt . McElroy
during his tenure of office in Washington as Postmaster of
the U. s. House of Representatives. Pictured at the unveiling, 1-r, are Gong. Clarence Miller, Sen. Oakley
Coitins, Dillon Cross, Harry Curtis and Wallace Weaver,
cemetery trustees, and Racine Mayor Charles Pyles. Rev.
Howard Shively gave the invocation and the RAcine
American Legion Post presented the colors, with Kyle A.
Allen as bugler . The marker was secured by Mrs . Huston
and Gerald Powell, a descendant of the McElroy family.

markedly today at the start of
the second week of a stepped
up busing plan to integrate
Boston's public schools.
Security was somewhat
relaxed and no trouble was
reported.
Buses , with the usual
motorcycle escort and with .
police lining the routes ,
arrived at the schools without
incident. A state police
helicopter Dew over to head
off any troublesome groupo
from forming .
Many of the children,
arriving in the 47 degree tern.:.
perature, were huddled in
IContinued on page 8)

Three injured
in collision
at jtmction
Three persons were injured
in a collision Sunday on Rt.
618 at the junction to County
Road 50 in Meigs County. The
Galiia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol said cars
driven by Waldman Stevens,
40, Reedsville, and David E.
Milihone, 21 , Tuppers Plains,
collided headon in a curve.
Injured were Millhone and
two passengers in his car,
Debbie D. Millhone, 20, and
Chastity Millhone, age one.
Stevens was c harged with
driving left of the center.
There was heavy damage to
bolh vehicles.
A Saturday accident occurred on County Road 10,
five tenths of a mile north of
Rt. 124 where John R . Dolin,
21, Rt. 1, Cheshire, lost
control uf his car which ran
off the road and overturned
on its right side. There was
moderate damage.
A single. car accident occurred at 3 a. m. Sunday on
Safford School Rd. one tenth
of a mile south of Rt. 141. The
pa trol said Ronald A. Fisher,
21, Gallipolis, lost control of
his car which ran off the right
side of the highway striking a
rock and embankment.
A final accident occurred at
12:10 a. m. today on Rt. 35,
where an auto driven by
David W. Bicknell, 23,
Hamil ton, 0., struck and
killed a deer.

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2'-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Sept. 15, 1975

DisCiples. 25-7 over Warriors

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Sr11•o• I '
)rwd

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Dinner
caps off
•
openmg

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A dmner at the Me1gs Inn
Saturday mgh t chmaxed the
grand opemng of the new
Tuppers Plains Branch Bank
of the Pomeroy Na hon al
Bank.
Edison
Hob stetter ,
President
of
Pomeroy
National, presided over the
program followm g the dmner. High praises were g1ven
to Hobstetter and h1s w1fe,
Marcia, by v1s1tors and bank
directors for their leadersh ip
and work over the years
Coincidentally, the birthday
anniversary of the president
was also observed Saturday,
the grand opening date of the
branch . P ome r oy
new
National also has a branch in
Rutland and a driv e-m
facility in Pomeroy.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Griffith, Marilyn Wolfe, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Poulm , Mr.
and Mrs. George Hobstetter,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wolfe,
Mr. and Mrs. Cec1l Midkiff,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennts Keney,
Jeannie Harrison , Ron Grate ,
Bonnie
Welch ,
Randy
Koehler, Mr. and Mrs . David
Spencer, Rhonda Dempsey,
Peter Bielic, Doris Snowden,
Arthur Beegle, Mr. and Mrs.
Jlm Nelson, all of the main
office ; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs . W1lbur
Robinson , Mrs. Ke nneth
Grover, Tuppers Plains
Branch; Mr . and Mrs
William Hobstetter , Mr and
Mrs. Bruce May , Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Barr , Ruth Ann
Graham, Susie J effer s,
Charles Corder, Rutland
Branch; Mr. and Mr's
(Continued on page 8)

IS HISfORY REPEAI'ING ITSELF?

ABOVE - Roger Morgan, a dtrector of the Pomeroy National Bank, took a few minutes
away from greeting visitors at the new branch in Tuppers Plains Saturday to have refresh·
ments served by Doris Koenig. Members of the Tuppers Plains Commumty Club! served
some 600 VISitors. Wmning door prizes were Mrs. Dottie Sprague, Route 1, Reedsville, $50,
and Oscar Babcock, Tuppers Plains, and John Wickham, Chester, each $25.
AT LEFT . BEWW - Highest tributes were paid to Edison and Marc1a Hobstetter
Saturday mght at a dmner at the Meigs Inn m Pomeroy to mark the opening of a new branch
of the Pomeroy National Bank m Tuppers Plains. Mr. Hobstetter i.• oresident of the bAnk
Speakers. mcludmg viSiting bankers and members of the board of directors h1ghly commended both Mr. and Mrs. Hobstetter for their work over the years w1th the Pomero¥
National !lank. Mrs. Hobstetter received a standing ovation when she was introduced .
Employes a nd their husbands and w1ves, directors and their wives, representatives of firms
prov1dmg equipment for the new branch, visiting bankers and others were guests.

DR. LAMB
Politicians on the move

Presidency was
on their minds
United Press International
President Ford and V1ce
President Nelson Rockefeller
were visiting oil country, and
leaders of both part1es were
attending m eet ings from
Minneapolis to Dallas to
Disney World this weekend
All had presidential politics
on their minds
Ford was m Dallas
Saturday to get an honorary
degree, address a gathering
of
Republican women,
dedicate
a
petroleum
museum and raise money for
his party . Whtte House officials
estimated
the
President's appearance at a
$l,QOO..a-plate barbecue lunch
brought the GOP $150,000.
Rockefeller, in Oklahoma
Saturday, spoke to a $20-aplate dmner that drew about
400 persons. He said energy,
much of which is produced in
Oklahoma, is one of three
major problems facing the
country. The other two, he
said, are unemployment and

e x cess1ve
govern ment
spending .
Far to the nor th, the
Democrats wer e holdmg the
first m a sertes of candtda te
forums It brought five presidential candidates to the
lectern for anh-GOP oratory
and quesllonmg from the
1,500 party acllvists in the
aud1ence .
All five contenders - Terry
Sanford, Morris Udall, Milton
Shapp, Fred Harris and Btrch
Bayh - got warm welcomes.
But the strongest interest
among the Minnesotans, who
made up most of the
audience, was focused on
party warhorse Sen. Hubert
Humphrey Although he did
not take part in the forum,
Humphrey held a fundrrusmg
event for his senatonal reelectiOn btd afterward m the
same hotel.
The Natwnal Federallon of
Republican Women met in
Dallas and heard much the
same oratory from a galaxy

Coffee is a strong stimulant
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB : Is ther e
anything else th at a person
could drink that IS hot besides
water to keep warm' It ts not
cold enough to put the heaters
gomg, so I drmk coffee or tea,
and then I have to go to the
bathroom in a hurry . This

of party s tar s, mcludm g
Ford, John Connally and
Barry Goldwate r .
It was at that meeting
Saturday that Ford assa iled

" pess imists"

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who

see

Amenca crumbhng under
economic woe and fear. " I
didn't take the sacred oath of
off1ce to preside over the
declme and fall of the United
States of Amertca," Ford
said
" 1 most emphati cally
reject t hese scenarios of
pessimism. Frankly I've had
1! With the negative attitude
that would write a selffulfilling prophesy of doom

for America."
Southern governors began
arnvmg dunng the weekend
for thetr conference this week

51st State proposals abound,
By United Press International

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gets to be a problem on the
way home from town. Is the
coffee injuring my kidneys?
I don't know how much I
drmk, but 1t IS quite a bit, and
I ha ve to cut out coffee before
and after dinner or else I
don't sleep
I am now on Stelazine,

at Lake Buena Vista, Fla .
Presidential politics was
foremost
among
the
preliminary talk.
George Wallace mel
Saturday with potential
supporters for a Florida
primary campaign, and
Georgia Gov . George Busbee
was talking Sunday about a
Southern regional primary.
He said that if not possible for
next year, the governors
should work on it for 1980.
North Carolina Gov. James
Holshouser predicted Ford
would carry his state, but
South Carolina Gov. James
Edwards, without predicting
a winner in his state, noted
Ronald
Reagan ' s

"tremendous track record."

The United states and the American way of life was Clll&lt;:e
held in honorable esteem throughout the world.
Today we are often subjected to censure and scorn by other
nations 1111d by our own citizenry. Our country prospered under
the faith and vision of our forefathers. Now our aoeiety· II
seemingly rotting from within and coming apart _a t the se•m•.
Could it be that we have forgotten our fowuling principles
and forsaken God ?
Is history t:_epeating itself? The Bible tells us that
''righteousnessex.alteth a nation : but sin is a reproach to l!lly
people." (Proverbs 14:34 KJV) Not only should we give heed to
the Biblical counsel, but we should also be forewarned by
recognizing what has happened to other civillzations when God
has been ejected from their culture. In hla book, The Deellne
and Fall of the Roman Empire, Edward Gibbon gave five
basic reasons why that great civillzation withered and died
(could these have ominous meaning for us today?):
1. The dignity and sanctity of the home was undermined.
2. Higher taxes were levied for public spending for free
bread and circuses for the populace.
3. There was a mad craze for pleasure. Sports became
more brutal and Immoral every year.
4. Great armaments were built while there was an inward
decay of individual responsibility.
5. Religion faded from faith into mere form, losing touch
with life, and was powerless to guide the people.
Next year the United States of America will be 200 yean
old. We are now m vartous stages of preparation for
celebrating the bicentenial. As we prepare ourselves for our
country's 200th birthday it might do us well to remember tbe
founding principles of our nation and realign OlU' alms.
Could it be that through these 200 years we might have
veered from our original course as a nation and history may be
repeating itself?
The average age of the world's great civillzations has been
only 200years. Those civilizations progressed from bondage to
spiritual faith, from faith to great courage, from courage to
liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to
selfishness, from selfishness to complacency, from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependence, and from
dependence back again to bondage. Where do we, as a nation ,
stand right now in this cycle?
Is history repeating itself'

kidneys.
You might not need those
medicines you are taking or
Dilantin and Navane.
DEAR READER - Your in such quantity if you give up
letter reminds me of my coffee entirely, which I
experience in a city hospital strongly recommend in your
clinic attended by a well- case. The drugs have tbe
known medical university opposite actions to tbe drug in
staff. I kept seeing patients your coffee and tea, caffeine.
For something hot to drink,
who came to the clinic
because they had burning in you can use decaffeinated
the pit of the stomach and coffee. You might substitute
ulcer s, mptoms. After they this part of the time as you
had been extensively studied withdraw from all that coffee
they
were
put
on you are drinking. Large
tranquilizers. No one asked amounts of coffee do mduce
them if they drank coffee or an anxiety state in some
how much. UsuaUy they were people.- Drop down to two
' washing their tranquilizers cups a day, then one, then
down with coffee . Since none, and replace as you go
coffee contains caffeine, a with decaffeniated products
powerful brain stimulant, the if you wish.
two counteracted each other.
Other substitutes include
Often
these
people hot It;monade, bouillon, clear
recovered entirely after they soups and if you want to go
stopped coffee and threw way out, hot sassafras tea .
away the tranquilizers. The For more information about
stomach symptoms were coffee write to me in care of
caused by the coffee.
this newspaper, P.O. Box
No, coffee is not injuring 15Sl, Radio City Station, New
your kidnesy. It does York, NY 10019. Send 50 cents
stimulate the kidneys to act, and a long, stamped, selfand the amount of liquid you addressed envelope, and ask
drink does the rest. All that for The Health Letter number
water has to go somewhere, 1-1, Coffee, Tea, Cola, Cocoa.
and the principal way of
When a heavy coffee
eliminating it is through the drinker stops abruptly he can

have headaches and withdrawal-type reactions. The
body gets used to all tbe
caffeine, so stop gradually.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have '
never been able to get a
satisfactory answer to the
question of why I have to get
up two or three times diU'ing
the night to urinate wben ' I
drink nothing before going to
bed. Where does the water
come from?
DEAR READER - Yow
body is over half water. over
70 per cent of the weight .-i&gt;f
your muscles is water, alld
you have water in the Oulcls jn
all the tissues.
When you lie down, if you
have an abundant amowtt of
Ouid in yOW' body, feet,
ankles or abdomen that has
accumulated over the day,
the kidneys will simply m~r
out more water from your
blood. Then, if you have a
small bladder or are nervous
and have sleeping problems
anyway, you may well have
to get up at night. 11)is
problem is independent ,of
prostate problems in men. In
this condition the bladder is
overloaded because of tbe
obstruction
from
the
enlarged prostate.

also for 52nd, 53rd, 54th, 55th, etc.

Texans, under agreement,
can send 10 senators into
Washington when they please

Old Glory has flown with 50 stars for 15 years, but there are
more than a few proposals around to add to that firmament
with a 51st state - and perhaps more.
The next state could be named Superior . Or possibly there
might be five more, all born of the present state of Texas.
The idea of new states is as old as the country 1tself. Some,
SIICh as one named Franklin, actually eXlsted for a few years Supreme Court 's one man-one vote dectston. Fearing dominabefore disappearing. Another, caUed Sequoyah, adopted a lion by the Los Angeles area, th e state senate , chosen on a
geographical basis, voted 22-16 to split the state at the
state constitution, but lost out to Republican party politics.
Tehachapi
mountain range about 50 miles north of Los Angeles
Texas still bas the right to divide itseif into fiv e sta tes to
create
the states of " North California" and " South
without approval of Congress - and there's a move afoot to do
just that because it would give the area 10 senators instead of California." However, the assembly, chosen on a population
basts a nd dominated by the south, easily rejected the plan.
two.
There've been proposals to spht up Idaho and Califorma ; to
Idaho - There was a proposal in the early 196011 to split
create new states out of what is now New Yori\ .City, the
',
Idaho
into two states. The north..south talk comes up every
District of Col~llJJ!., tllejlavajo Indian Rese.rv~lon, New
York's LOng Islap!:h ::.~/'Y!,Bnd 's Eastern Sharer: and Puerto tlme 1ssues m the legislature tend toward sectionalism.
Rico. There have Deeri'·proposals for other new silltes to be Histor ically the north..south rift goes back to the territorial
named Forgotonia, Aroostook, Jefferson, Winston , Indian days when the first cap1tol was established at Lewiston, then
pirated away to Boise. The rift nearly prevented Idaho 's ad
Stream and Vietbam.
Many have been whimsical or nothing mor~ than efforts to mission to the Union.
draw attention to tbe political plight of a region. A few have
been serious.
F'orgotonia ..- In 1973, Earl Gamm, then ~ and a Vietnam
Here's a look at ,some of them :
veteran studying drama at Western illinois University,
Superior- Congr~ granted the Upper Peninsula to Michi- proposed that 16 western illinois counties secede to form a new
gan - taking it away from Wisconsin - early in the 19th state called "Forgotonia" to dramatize how the state and
Century as a consolation prize for losing the Toledo Strip to federal governments had neglected that part of the state .
Ohio. Michigan state Rep. Dominic Jacobetti recently got Gamm appointed himself governor of Forgotonia; and was
invited to address the Illinois legislature. He did so, wearing a
legislative approval to spend $5,000 to study the feasibility of
creating a new state there, to be called Superior. If it did stovepipe hat and other Lincoln garb. The highwater mark of
suddenly find itself a state instead of an accumulation of 15 the Forgotonia drive came when the Mercer County board
' Michigan counties covered mostly with trees, it would rank voted unanimously to secede from Illinois.
' 42ndln size and 49th in population - and, opponents of the idea
Aroostook - There was a serious move to create another
say, Slat in wealth. DiSsident groups in seven adjacent
state
in Maine in 1843. The dispute is still called the "Aroostook
counties in Wisconsin have asked to join in.
County War ." The border between United States and Canada
" ...... l.i.
Jefferson - There was a movement in 1!141 to create the had not been settled at that tlme and residents thought they
"110verelgn state o( Jefferson" out of the northern tip of were being mistreated by Washington. The idea q~etl~ died.
Callfornla and tbe aoutherl) Oregon coast. Stan Delaplane, now
a ~cated travel writer of, The San Francisco Otronicle,
District of Columbia - There is a Statehood Party that
1I'Cll1 a ~tzer prize -~or his lighthearted rewrting of the
usually runs second or third in elections in Washington, D.C.
Jeffenon movement, which died with the beginning of World
The Republicans sometimes run behind them, and the
War r II on Dec. 7, 1941.'
Statehood Party now has a member on the city council. Bills
,
'
are introduced in Congress almost every session to make the
Callfornla
The most significant effort to separate
District a sta te , and they routinely die in committee.
;Oillfornla into two stateS came in 1966 shortly after tlje
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AT LEFT, ABOVE - Employes of the new branch bank at Tuppers ~Iains were all
smiles Saturday at the recephon given them during an open house . An estlffiated 600 persons vis ited the grand opening of the Pomeroy National Bank branch all day on Saturday .
The employes, from the left, are Marilyn Robinson , Don Nelson (manago;r) and Mary
Grover. Employes of the main bank and the Rutland Branch aSSisted wtth the grand
opemng Favors were distributed to vis1tors.

Winston - Some 2,500 residents of Winston County, Ala.,
established the "Free State of Winston" in 1862,and asked both
sides in the Civil War to "leave us alone, wunolested, that we
may work out our political and financial destiny here in tbe
hills and mountains of northwest Alabama." Winston issued its
own paper money, but neither side left it alone. The county's
legislator, C.C. Sheats, was expeUed from the legislature and
later arrested for treason. He was released in 1864 without
being tried. An attempt to abolish Winston County failed.
Franklin - There briefly existed a state called Frank.lln m
what is now eastern Tennessee. Historians now refer to it as
the " Lost State of Franklin." John Sevier, a native Virginian,
was Franklin's first and only governor, chosen In a convention
in 1784 at the state's capitol, now Jonesboro, Tenn. But a
military man, Col. John Tipton, declared the new state illegal.
It started a war that wasn't settled until February, 1788, when
Sevier was defeated in a battle at Tipton's plantation. Sevier
later became Tennessee's first governor.
'
Eastern
Shore - Maryland's Eastern Shore juts out past
Otesapeake Bay into the Atlantic. There are periodic efforts
by legislators from the area to secede from Maryland and
form their own state. The efforts usually reach their height at
reapportionment time -when the Eastern Shore always loses
some representation.

Vietbam - A whlnmical letter ln a national news magazine
at the end of tbe Vietnam war suggested Alabama be turned
over to Vietnamese refugees because the ~tate is mostly rural
and its cllinate is !lomewhat like that of Vietnam. It suggested
the name could be chanoP.rl In ViP.thRm
Navajo- The Navajo Indian Reservation, which covers sec;
lions of northeast Ari2Dna, southeastern Utah and north·
western New Mexico, occasionally makes noises about
becoming a separate state. But the Navajo nation exists under
a treaty with the U.S. goverrunent and has authority very close
to that of a state anyway. Most of the dissatisfaction over tbe
years has stemmed from Indian frustrations with federal
overseers, and in the case of Navajo, this federal domination is
rapidly dwindlinR away .
Long Island - In 1967 the Long Island Association of Commerce and Industry passed a resolution favoring secession
from New York state and establishing Long Island \IS an independent state. The grpup conteilds the island, with a

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population of 2.5 million, could get far more federal aid as a
separate state than as a portion of New York.
m!llan Stream - In 1832 disgruntled residents of extreme
northern New Hampshire set up the republic of Indian Stream.
It was during the time the United States and Canada were
disputing a common boundary . There were a series of Jrld.
napings, America troops came into the area, and tbe territory
was finally made a part of New Hampshire in 1842 under tbe
Webster-Ashburton Treatv.

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rna,

Puerto Rico - As many as 2.8 million Puerto Ricans
want to make their island the 51st state of tbe United States.
But that doesn't mean the move is any closer than It was 5l
years ago when Puerto Ricans gained U.S. citizenship.
But Puerto Rico receives more than $1.67 billlon a year ill
federal assistance ...:. without paying taxes. or providing votes
The most recent test of public opinloll was in 1967, when 80.l
per cent of the voters said they pl'eferred to remain a coq~·
monwealth, 38.9 per cent supported statehood, and .8 per cenl
said they preferred complete independence.
Sequoyah ~ On Nov. 7, 1905, tl)e residents of a new state, to
be called Sequoyah, approved a constitution by a margin of 61c:
land sept a delegation to Wash~n. They were membens..lll
five Indian tribes and had been promised by years of treat!~
- tbe latest only seven years old - that they would be ~
mltted to the union. But in 1908 President Teddy Roosevelt aiilc
the new state was a violation of Republican party policy,
declared that party politics superseded govenunent treatiet
with the Irtdians. He crushed the effort to establiah a separiilt
Indian state in what is now the eastern third of Oklahoma. ·The constitution written for Sequoyah became tbe f~.
tion of the Oklahoma constitution. The Great Seal of Sequo~
with only minor chan2es. became the seal of ()k)aboma
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New York City- In tbe 1989 New York City mayoral eiectlm
candidate JllllJJly Breslin proposed that tbe ell)' secede and
become a separate state. The proposal got little attention. But
in 1971; Rep. Bella Abzug brought It up again and got tbe
dorsement of three of the city's five borough presidents. lll;ie
argued that New York City deseMs to be a Illata becaueJI,II
budget t:; larger than any lltate 'a and that the city never g~ aa
much l!&amp;ck money as it spends. U admitted, New Yort Cl!f
:woul~ be the seventh most j)opuloWJ state in the uniClll. 'rl\ilt
tdea IS still kicking around, and occaeional notices of otlier
moves to make the city a state are aeen in the city's neWSpapers.
1

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CHESHIRE - The Gallia Coach Jim Polcyn made a
County Disciples opened its de fen sive cha nge whtc h
1975 season here Sunday wtth proved beneficial and hts
••
2!&gt;-7 VIctory over the Meigs bffens1ve unit pushed over
a
•
Warriors m the Amateur another TD in the third
Football League .
stanza on an e1g ht yard run
Following a scoreless ftrst by fullback dack1e Parsons.
period, Gallia County jumped Cremeans · k1ck sailed wide to
into a IHI lead following a the left.
In the fourth penod , Me1gs
punt fumble recovery near
the five yard line . Two
penaihes put the ball on the 10
where qua rterba c k Bob
Ratliff , substitutmg for the
injured Gary Kurtz , threw a
TD paSS to Larry Howell . The
By FRED DOWN
extra point attempt fatled
UPI Sports Writer
Me1gs took a 7-6 lead When
It's showdown time in the
quarterback Bob Werry hit Amencan League East--and
Ch1p Haggerty on a 54-yard both the Boston Red Sox and
bomb. Haggerty caught the Baltimore Orioles a re ready
ball , then outran the
The Orioles are staging one
I..., "
DISC iples' le£! de fe ns1ve of their late dr1ves like the 28safety . Paul Aikman 's ki ck 6 one that won them the
made 11 1-6 Meigs w1th 3:15 Eastern title m 1974. But the
left in the first half. St1ll later Red Sox, who folded a year
that same penod. Meigs tr1ed ago, are showing no signs of a
another long pass but cor- collapse.
nerback George Curry picked
And so. after 51-&gt; months,
11 off and returned to the end the AL has a showdown
AMATEUR GR!DffiON ACTION - Gary Hood, 185 lb. center (74) and 205 lb. cor·
zone, glVlng the Gallians the series the two.game set the
nerba ck George Curry and others on the sideline of tbe Gallia Disciples watch action on the
lea d
again .
Orland Red Sox Will play against the
"' ' field Sunday when the Disciples upended the Me1gs Warriors 2!&gt;-7 m the opemng game of the
•
Cremeans' kick pushed the Ortoles Tuesday and WedAmateur League season on the Kyger Creek High School fteld.
score to 13-7 al the half.
nesday
In the second half, Gallia
The Red Sox wtll go into the
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lEV. HOW.UD C. llACK

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punted to the Disciples' Dave
Burnett who broke loose for a
75 yard return before being
hauled down at the five. The
fma1 Gallia s1x-pointer came
moments later on a one yard
sneak by quarterback Bob
Ratliff . The extra point kick
was blocked.
Following that sco r~. Me1gs

could not move the ball and
los t ground on a jarring
tac'kle of runnin g back Bruce
Harris by Mike Wolfe . The
Disciples went into ball
control to run out the clock.
Mtke Hager was the top
ground gainer for Galha wtth
50 yards. Bob Martin had 43;
Jackte Parsons , 27, and

Ratliff, 28. Meigs had 20
yards rushing and 80 via the

air .
By Quarters
Me1gs
0 7 0 1)- 7
o 13 6 6-25
Gallia
Officials : Gary Fishe~,
referee; Dale Rothgeb, head
linesman; Marshall French,
umpire-field judge.

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Bosox set for East showdown .

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pride hurt in loss

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EAST LANSING, Mich . Buckeyes defense .
":(i;PI) - The physical m" We're a better defensive
":juries will heal with time , but team than a year ago ," said
":Michigan State IS saddled Hayes.
The most serious of the
~:With a classic case of hurt
'Jiride that could make for a MSU physical casualties was
hi ghly -tou ted . sophomore
' long football season .
tailback
Ted Bell, who was
" We still have a good
football team," coach Denny inserted into the starting
Stolz insisted in hushed tones lineup just before gametlme
.,fl)llowin g the Spartans • but sidelined before the first
)l,umihating 21·0 season- half was over.
Officials announced Sun"'Qpening loss to Ohio Stale,
-"but we have to get them day that Bell reinjured the
~1iealed .
same knee that benched hun
• "Mostly 1t's a lot of hurt the entire season last year
• ~»'ide s that have to be and will probably miss the
next few games.
•.mended," he said.
It also had been feared that
~ · ~ OSU coach Woody Hayes
: '!'as impressed With th e surgery would be needed for

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Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
;;.- NEVf YORK ( UPI) - Ed Garvey has the same habit so
"many others have. He gets a little carried away sometunes,
" and in th1s case, perhaps 1t was completely understandable.
•· ' The New England Patrwts had put 1t to a vote. After a good
" tleal of back and forth on the subJect underscored by some loud
"'raucous voices now and then, they voted no to proposition one .
" 1:1Jey decided to strike, and that meant they wouldn ' t play their
c:llnal preseason contest with the New York Jets Sunday at New
"Haven, Conn.
" ' As head of the NFL players' association, it now became
" appropriate for Ed Garvey to say somethmg about the
~ patri ots' actwn and he was right there ready With a statement
" 'tn Washington.
" Hopefully ," he sa1d, " this action w1ll bring the owners to
the bargainmg table m the spirit of compromise . We all admire
the courage of the New England Patriot team in helping to
bring about a settlement ."
The strike by the Patriots, Garvey added, was " an illustratiOn of how alienated the players have now become with the
" negotiatmg process. "
Garvey was only saying what any good union leader would,
and the only objec llon there is that he was taking one
"TIIustrahon by the players Without bothering to consider a far
·ffiore Important one by those who actually pay their salartes.
" Not the owners, but the fans.
" " The ones I talked to about the Patriots' strike and the
•wsslbilily of it spreading to the other NFL clubs didn ' t seem to
--care one way or another They voiced no resentment toward
either the players or the owners, only an unpassiveness and
indifference in what to them was merely another m a steady
': siiccession of labor strikes. From discussing the Patriots'
' action with the dozen or so professional football fans 1 did, I
• came away with the distinct Impression the fan protest would
be far less than anyone would imagine if the pro football
'J!&lt;:bedule was canceled for the entire season. For sure, few
,1iqusewtves would complain.
-- Posstbly there might have been a time when a player strike
causing the cancellation of an entire pro football schedule or
'"any other professwnai sport schedule would rank as a national
calam1ty, but not any more.
. People have too many other forms of dtvertisement to oc"':Qpy thetr tune and mterest. Besides, they are deeply involved
:-with their own daily problems like trying to deal with tbe rising
!~ost of food , gasoline, rent and medtcal and dental bills, so how
~ can they get worked up at all over anlissue like the pro football
'P,'layers being upset with the owners. The fans accepted a
'se~en-week walkout by the NFL players a year ago and that
'gOt them sort of used to no pro football. Somehow they'd find a
'Wily to struggle along without 1t even if they had to do so over
'M\ entire season.
1 know for certain some owners would almost welcome a
ii!ilwdown. They feel they' ve been pushed as far as they can
•be and appear ready to write off the season if it comes down to
th~t. Few players would actually be willing to go that far .
Maybe some say they would, but there's a world of difference
~tween saying something ·and doing it.
'"'~e Patriots held a meeting Sunday after their game with
'l:l'tl! Jets was canceled and said they hoped to gain the support
·)l.t,players on the other ~ NFL clubs. Personally, I think they
:J;qrve the good wishes of those players, but I doubt they 'll get
' their support.
~ ·)'or sure, they don 't have either the sympathy or support of
"tllefans. I think the players sense that and it's one of the things
' 11\at would keep t he m from ever really thinking of a strike m
'ffie lon g sense of the word.

star linebacker Pat McCiowry, who dislocated his
shoulder, but doctors successfully treated the injury
Sunday and he was expected
to be ready for this week 's
game agaipst nonconference
nval Mianu (Ohio).
Other wounded Spartans,
such as tailback Rich Baes,
defensive end Otto Smith,
safety Tom Graves and big
offensive
tackle
Tony
Bruggenthies, had suffered
their mjuries in pl'eseason
practice, but Stolz managed

to keep word from leaking
out.
Those players also are
expected back on the gridiron
for the Miami game, but they
may see only limited action in
some cases .
The Bucks escaped with
comparatively mild injuries .
linebacker Ken Kuhn suffered a shoulder separation
and
ankle
sprain,
trrepresmble tailback Archie
Griffin and Tun Fox got
bruised thighs and Nick
Buonamici sustained a pulled

hamstrmg .
" It was tough , man , really
tough," said Gnffin, who
gained more than 100 yards
for the 22nd straight regularseason game. " Three times I
got fingers m my eyes, but it
wasn't anything I dtdn 't ex-

·~ V•' ~

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series w1th e tther a 41'.!-or a
3~,g am e lead, depending
upon the result of their game
with the Milwaukee Brewers
tonight. A split would pretty
much make the Red Sox
"safe" a nd a two .game
swee p
would
VIrtuall y
ehmmate the Onoles.
The teams prepped for the
big series Sunday With victortes - the Red Sox
defeating the Brewers 11-6 and
the Orioles beating the
Detroit Tigers 9-3. That left
the Red Sox w1th a four .game
lead w1th two weeks left m the
season
Carl Yastrzemski's single
drove in the tie-breakmg run
m the seventh innmg and
rookie sensation Fred Lynn
added a run.;;coring single in
the game-winning three-run
rally . Lynn had four straight
hits, ra1sed his RBI total to 99
and average to .336. Hank
Aaron h1t his 12th homer for

now twice as good" as when
11

he gained 988 yards in his
rookie year, ran 11 times for
44 yards, caught four passes
for another 42 yards and
scored a touchdown.
The 245-pound fullback personally accounted for the
final 40 yards of an 81-yard
scoring drive. In four straight
plays, Clark rumbled 21
Yl\rds after catching a pass,
then stepped off runs of three
and 15 yards and climaxed
the drive by hurdling into the
end zone from one yard away .

Dave Green, who got off
several beautiful punts to
keep the Saints m poor fteld
position, fmished off the
scoring in the second half
with field goals of 20 and 43
yards.
Rookie halfback Stan
Fritts, who dashed 44 yards
on a draw play and wound,up
the game's leading rusher
w1th 90 yards in nine carries,
could " very possibly" draw a
starting assignment m the
first regularseason game,
said Brown.
" He's a hard-runmng ,
hardblocking battler,"
Brown sa1d of Fntts, fresh
out of North Carolina State .
"We like his style."
Cmcinnall fmished 1ts
exhibition season with a 4-.'l
record, while New Orleans,
PAHACHUfE rEAM
WARENDORF, Germany
(UP!) - American athletes
won two events Sunday at the
World
Formation
Parachutmg championship.
In the 10-man competition,
the U.S. team rolled up a total
of 100 points in 163.85 seconds.
Australia was second at 100
points in 175.15 seconds, while
France placed third also with
100 points and a timing of
177.75 seconds.
76ERS CUr fSCHOGL
PillLADELPHIA ( UPI) The Philadelphia 76ers an·
nounced Sunday they had cut
forward John Tschogl, a
three-year NBA veteran.
Ts&amp;iogl, a &amp;-foot-6 forward,
played his first two years
with Atlanta before coming to
the 76ers. He played in 39
games last season for
Philadelphia.
l IICI
n'i"~'

OEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AR£A
CHESTER L. TAN fill E HILL
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ct1y Editor
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unday l1mcs Scnltne,'-'1'-----'

fwlns 10, A's 8
Danny Thompson's threerun homer was the big blow of
a six..-un first-inning oUtburst
by Mirmesota. Bill Butler
went 5 1-3 innings to win his
fourth game despite homers
by Oakland's Gene Tenace
and Claudell Washington.
Glenn Abbott was the loser.

Phils remazn 5% out

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
pect."
Mike Schmidt would trade
Baggett was intercepted m h1s 36 homers and Steve
three times by Craig Carlton will gladly swap hts
Cassady , fumbled the bail 13losses for the same elusive
away on another occamon pnze- a pennant for th e
and broke up two other plays Philadelphia Phtllies.
simply by fallmg down .
No question, Schmidt has
more than delivered toward
the Phillies' fadmg hope of
ca t ch mg the Pittsburgh
Ptrates in the National
League East, while Carlton ,
who was counted on to win 20
games, has been a major
which hopes to have Manning disappointment at 13-13.
back for the Washington
" I can't make up for those
Redskins m its regular· 13 losses bulif I could, we'd
season opener, was 2-4 for the be in better shape, that's for
preseason.
sure," sa1d Carlton, Sunday's

Redskins face Spartans
in second tilt Saturlhy
Even though Miami (Ohio)
ran up 50 pomts against
Marshall, Redskins coach
Dick Crum is worried his
team ' s 24-game unbeaten
streak is m jeopardy.
The
Redskms
meet
MIChigan State thts Saturday,
a team blanked 21-() by Ohio
State in their Big Ten season
opener.
"We weren't ready today to
play Michigan State," Crum
said after the w1n over
Marshall Saturday. " If we
play the ftrst part of the
Michigan State game the way
we played today , we'll be out
of the contest early ."
Ball State won its first MidAmerican Conference game
38-28 over Toledo and Ohio
Umversity hed Central
Michigan 6-6 m the other
MAC game.
Bowling Green edged
Brigham Young 23-21, Akron
defeated Western Mtchtgan
27-21 and Kent State beat
Northeast Louisiana 31·29 m
games involving other MAC
teams.
Cincmnati downed Richmond 19-6, Eastern Kentucky
edged Davton 3!1-24, Ashland
be•t :"erf'ts State 34-JO, Thiel
beat Case-Western Reserve
35-21, Youngstown State
blanked Central State 10-0,
Albion got by Defiance 1!1-3,
Findlay shut out Earlham 370, Bluffton beat Taylor 15-8
and Hiram edged John
Carroll 1!1-7. ·
Seven Fumbles for foledo
In Ohio Conference action,
Wittenberg opened defense of
its league title with a J!Hl win
over Baldwin-Wallace,
Capital beat Heidelberg 1&amp;-7,
Denison defeated Marietta
14-6 and Ohio Wesleyan
stopped Ohio Northern 21-ll.
In other games involving
OC teams , Westminster
defeated Muskin~um IHI on

Yankees 6, Indians Z
Hunter went seven innings
for his 22nd victory--second
highest of his major league
career - with Tippy Martinez
pitching two scoreless in·
nmgs in relief for New York.
Roy White's homer and runscoring hits by Graig Nettles
and Rick Pell'lpsey gave the
Yankees a 3-0 lead in the third
inning and they added three
m the seventh. Boog Powell
and Rico Carty homered for
Cleveland.

two field goals, Otterbem
stopped Manchester 26-0,
DePauw downed Wooster 288, Mount Union rolled over
Geneva 5!&gt;-7, Kenyon beat
Bethany 24-12 and Centre
blanked Oberlin 28-0.
Toledo fumbled seven
tunes and lost the ball five
times to Ball State, leading to
the Cardinals' first-ever MAC
win and thetr second victory
of the season. Ball State
began competition this year
m the conference.
Rocket quarterback Gene
Swick, last year's national
offensive leader, completed
15 of 27 passes for 158 yards.
Central Mtchigan freshman
Rabe Savich of Yugoslavia
traded two field goals with
Ohio University's Gary
Homer as the Otippewas kept
their unbeaten streak going
at 14 With the MAC tie.
Wilhelm Scores fwice
Savich ktcked field goals of
26 and 36 yards and Homer
booted them from 31 and 38
yards out.
Tom Wilhelm scored twice,
on runs of one and 42 yards,
and Jim Enbick kicked a held
goal to lead Akron past
Western Michigan, although
the Broncos' Don Matthews
had Ulree touchdowns in a
second-half comeback.
The Golden Flashes saved
head coach Dennis Fitz.
gerald's KSU debut by
withstanding a gallant
second-half comeback by
Northeast Louisiana .
The Indians had pulled to
within two points of Kent, 31·
29, and looked to he ready to
score agam when Jim
Whiting sacked Joe Bruner
for an eight-yard loss wtth
3:40 left in the game. A 61yard field goal attempt on
fourth down by Northeast's
Dave Shraer fell short with
2:5:&gt; remaining.

wmner of the Phillies' 13-7
triumph over the Chicago
Cubs.
Added Schmidt, who belted
his 35th and 36th homers to
take over the major league
lead : " I'd still trade any
home run title for a world
championship because that's
what 1t's all about." Schmidt
also had a run-scormg single
to give him four RBis for the
day .
The wm at least enabled the
Phillies to remain 51-&gt; games
back of first-plac e Pittsburgh.
" In order for us to tum it
around," Schmidt said,
" we've got to beat the Pirates
four out of the five games we
have left with them. And to be
truthful , we can't lose more
than two of the 13 games we
have left."
In addition to Schmidt's
homers, D1ck Allen also
belted a tw&lt;H"un shot for the
Phils and pinch-hitter Tim
Hosley delivered a grand
slam for the Cubs off rookie
Randy Lerch in the mnth .
Elsewhere m the National
League Sunday, Pittsburgh
kept rolling with a 4-3 victory
over Montreal, St . Louis
downed New York 6-2,
Houston put away San D1ego
4-2, Los Angeles shaded
Atlanta 3-2 and Cincinnati
drubbed San Francisco 9-3
after losing the doubleheader
opener to the Giants 4-2.
In the American League,
Boston beat Milwaukee 8-6,
Baltimore topped Detrmt 9-3,
New York downed Cleveland
6-2, Minnesota outlasted
Oakland 10-8 and Kansas City
stopped California 10-4
Pirates 4, Expos 3
Pmch-hitter Duffy Dyer

singled home the tying run In
the eighth inning and when
Tony Scott bobbled the ball in
right, pinch..-unner Miguel
DOone raced home with the
winning run as PlttsbiD'gh
reduced the magic number
for
clinching
to
10.
Sanguillen's run-scoring
double and Richie Zisk's 19th
homer accounted - for the
other two Pirates' runs.
Cardinals I, Mets 2
A sacrifice Oy by Keith
Hernandez and Ted Slm·
mons' single produced a pair
of third inning runs that
enabled St. Louis to foll New
York's Tom Seaver in his bid
for his 22nd victory. Cards'
reliever Mike Garman
preserved rookie John
Denny's lOth win by pitching
out of a bases.Joaded one-out
jam in the eighth. A Jacket
Day crowd of 50,546-largest
m Busch Stadium historyturned out.
Dodgen 3, Braves Z
Ron Cey's two-run sixth
inning homer, nis 24th, gave
Los Angeles its sixth win the
last seven games. Cey's two
run shot gave hlm 92 RBis
and Davey Lopes stole his
71st base. Doug Rau (14-9)
outdueled Atlanta 's Carl
Morton (17-16) for the win.
Astros 4, Padres Z
Eilos Cabell banged out
three singles and drove home
two runs to help Houston foil
Randy Jones' bid for his 20th
victory . J .R. Richard ( 11-9 )
scattered nine hits including
Johnny Grubb's two-run
ninth inning double to gain
the win . Jones, still losing
ground to Seaver for the NL
cy Young Award, is now 1!110.

I

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"

''

service?
You get that
right along with
our low rates..:'

Along w1th our famous low cost auto ~no te c 1 1 0n c omes
a p rom1se ol promo t pe rso11a1 serv 1ce So yo u don 1
ha•. e to g1ve up a thnlg to get ou r lovv rates Yo u JUSt
have to tak e ad vantag e of them

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell Street
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 992-7155

,_,.....-.
. Uke a good neighbor,
. ~. State Farm is there.
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMO BILE INSURANCE COMPAN Y
Home Otk~ Bloon·ungton llhnoiS

p 7436

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•

Bengals blank Saints
CINCINNATI (UPI) Oteer up John, it wasn't the
Super Bowl you lost.
The 20-0 shutout John
North's New Orleans Samts
gave up to the Cincmnatl
Bengals Saturday mght was
only the finale of the
exhibition season, but North
took it hard.
He threw a mild fit in the
locker room.
"We were out-played, outcoached
and
outeverythinged," North
moaned. " They took 1t to us
every way they could."
Saints star quarterback Archie Manning was out with an
injury, and backups Bobby
Scott and Larry Cipa couldn't
move the team beyond
Cmcinnati's 31-yard line .
"We were never in the ball
game," complained North.
"Not even from the begin·
ning. I've still got four cuts to
make. I've never seen (my)
people stand around like that.
"I felt we might move the
ball," continued North,
throwing his hat down, "but
we didn't. We didn't ever
have a drive going . We had
nothing going ."
BengalsJloss Paul Brown
called hiS team's play "a
workmanlike effort.
"We tried to control the
game with defense, and I'm
glad we apparently got by
with no serious injuries," he
said. "We're going into the
regular season reasonably
healthy."
Cincinnati quarterback
Ken Anderson and fullback
Boobie Clark played only the
first half, but they dished out
enough to handle the Saints,
obviously
missed
who
Manning .
Anderson tuned up for the
Bengals regular-season
opener here next Sunday
against Cleveland by hitting
13 of 19 passes for 137 yards,
including a 27-yard touchdown peg to Isaac Curtis.
Clark, boasting that he is

th e Brewers
Don Baylor and Elrod Hendricks hit two..-un homers
and AI Bumbry scored three
runs for the Orioles, who have
won 10 of thetr last 12 games.
Mike Cuellar was routed in 2
1-3 innings but rookie Paul
Mitchell allowed ftve·hits and
no runs in the last 6 2-3 innmgs to wm his thtrd game
for the Orioles . Ray Bare
suffered the loss for Detroit.
Jim Hunter won his 22nd
game as New York defeated
Cleveland &amp;-2, Minnesota beat
Oakland 10-8, Kansas City
downed California 1!14 and
Texas topped Oticago ~ in
other AL games .
In the National League, it
was Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 3,
St . Louis 6 New York 2,
Philadelphia 13 Chicago 7,
Los Angeles 3 Atlanta 2,
Houston 4 San Diego 2 and
Cincinnati over San Fran·
cisco 9-3 after a 4-2 loss.

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2'-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Sept. 15, 1975

DisCiples. 25-7 over Warriors

••

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A
Sr11•o• I '
)rwd

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· ~ Ill.

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Dinner
caps off
•
openmg

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A dmner at the Me1gs Inn
Saturday mgh t chmaxed the
grand opemng of the new
Tuppers Plains Branch Bank
of the Pomeroy Na hon al
Bank.
Edison
Hob stetter ,
President
of
Pomeroy
National, presided over the
program followm g the dmner. High praises were g1ven
to Hobstetter and h1s w1fe,
Marcia, by v1s1tors and bank
directors for their leadersh ip
and work over the years
Coincidentally, the birthday
anniversary of the president
was also observed Saturday,
the grand opening date of the
branch . P ome r oy
new
National also has a branch in
Rutland and a driv e-m
facility in Pomeroy.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hobstetter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Griffith, Marilyn Wolfe, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Poulm , Mr.
and Mrs. George Hobstetter,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilham Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Wolfe,
Mr. and Mrs. Cec1l Midkiff,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennts Keney,
Jeannie Harrison , Ron Grate ,
Bonnie
Welch ,
Randy
Koehler, Mr. and Mrs . David
Spencer, Rhonda Dempsey,
Peter Bielic, Doris Snowden,
Arthur Beegle, Mr. and Mrs.
Jlm Nelson, all of the main
office ; Mr. and Mrs. Don
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs . W1lbur
Robinson , Mrs. Ke nneth
Grover, Tuppers Plains
Branch; Mr . and Mrs
William Hobstetter , Mr and
Mrs. Bruce May , Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Barr , Ruth Ann
Graham, Susie J effer s,
Charles Corder, Rutland
Branch; Mr. and Mr's
(Continued on page 8)

IS HISfORY REPEAI'ING ITSELF?

ABOVE - Roger Morgan, a dtrector of the Pomeroy National Bank, took a few minutes
away from greeting visitors at the new branch in Tuppers Plains Saturday to have refresh·
ments served by Doris Koenig. Members of the Tuppers Plains Commumty Club! served
some 600 VISitors. Wmning door prizes were Mrs. Dottie Sprague, Route 1, Reedsville, $50,
and Oscar Babcock, Tuppers Plains, and John Wickham, Chester, each $25.
AT LEFT . BEWW - Highest tributes were paid to Edison and Marc1a Hobstetter
Saturday mght at a dmner at the Meigs Inn m Pomeroy to mark the opening of a new branch
of the Pomeroy National Bank m Tuppers Plains. Mr. Hobstetter i.• oresident of the bAnk
Speakers. mcludmg viSiting bankers and members of the board of directors h1ghly commended both Mr. and Mrs. Hobstetter for their work over the years w1th the Pomero¥
National !lank. Mrs. Hobstetter received a standing ovation when she was introduced .
Employes a nd their husbands and w1ves, directors and their wives, representatives of firms
prov1dmg equipment for the new branch, visiting bankers and others were guests.

DR. LAMB
Politicians on the move

Presidency was
on their minds
United Press International
President Ford and V1ce
President Nelson Rockefeller
were visiting oil country, and
leaders of both part1es were
attending m eet ings from
Minneapolis to Dallas to
Disney World this weekend
All had presidential politics
on their minds
Ford was m Dallas
Saturday to get an honorary
degree, address a gathering
of
Republican women,
dedicate
a
petroleum
museum and raise money for
his party . Whtte House officials
estimated
the
President's appearance at a
$l,QOO..a-plate barbecue lunch
brought the GOP $150,000.
Rockefeller, in Oklahoma
Saturday, spoke to a $20-aplate dmner that drew about
400 persons. He said energy,
much of which is produced in
Oklahoma, is one of three
major problems facing the
country. The other two, he
said, are unemployment and

e x cess1ve
govern ment
spending .
Far to the nor th, the
Democrats wer e holdmg the
first m a sertes of candtda te
forums It brought five presidential candidates to the
lectern for anh-GOP oratory
and quesllonmg from the
1,500 party acllvists in the
aud1ence .
All five contenders - Terry
Sanford, Morris Udall, Milton
Shapp, Fred Harris and Btrch
Bayh - got warm welcomes.
But the strongest interest
among the Minnesotans, who
made up most of the
audience, was focused on
party warhorse Sen. Hubert
Humphrey Although he did
not take part in the forum,
Humphrey held a fundrrusmg
event for his senatonal reelectiOn btd afterward m the
same hotel.
The Natwnal Federallon of
Republican Women met in
Dallas and heard much the
same oratory from a galaxy

Coffee is a strong stimulant
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB : Is ther e
anything else th at a person
could drink that IS hot besides
water to keep warm' It ts not
cold enough to put the heaters
gomg, so I drmk coffee or tea,
and then I have to go to the
bathroom in a hurry . This

of party s tar s, mcludm g
Ford, John Connally and
Barry Goldwate r .
It was at that meeting
Saturday that Ford assa iled

" pess imists"

.

.

•'

who

see

Amenca crumbhng under
economic woe and fear. " I
didn't take the sacred oath of
off1ce to preside over the
declme and fall of the United
States of Amertca," Ford
said
" 1 most emphati cally
reject t hese scenarios of
pessimism. Frankly I've had
1! With the negative attitude
that would write a selffulfilling prophesy of doom

for America."
Southern governors began
arnvmg dunng the weekend
for thetr conference this week

51st State proposals abound,
By United Press International

,i

. . ..

gets to be a problem on the
way home from town. Is the
coffee injuring my kidneys?
I don't know how much I
drmk, but 1t IS quite a bit, and
I ha ve to cut out coffee before
and after dinner or else I
don't sleep
I am now on Stelazine,

at Lake Buena Vista, Fla .
Presidential politics was
foremost
among
the
preliminary talk.
George Wallace mel
Saturday with potential
supporters for a Florida
primary campaign, and
Georgia Gov . George Busbee
was talking Sunday about a
Southern regional primary.
He said that if not possible for
next year, the governors
should work on it for 1980.
North Carolina Gov. James
Holshouser predicted Ford
would carry his state, but
South Carolina Gov. James
Edwards, without predicting
a winner in his state, noted
Ronald
Reagan ' s

"tremendous track record."

The United states and the American way of life was Clll&lt;:e
held in honorable esteem throughout the world.
Today we are often subjected to censure and scorn by other
nations 1111d by our own citizenry. Our country prospered under
the faith and vision of our forefathers. Now our aoeiety· II
seemingly rotting from within and coming apart _a t the se•m•.
Could it be that we have forgotten our fowuling principles
and forsaken God ?
Is history t:_epeating itself? The Bible tells us that
''righteousnessex.alteth a nation : but sin is a reproach to l!lly
people." (Proverbs 14:34 KJV) Not only should we give heed to
the Biblical counsel, but we should also be forewarned by
recognizing what has happened to other civillzations when God
has been ejected from their culture. In hla book, The Deellne
and Fall of the Roman Empire, Edward Gibbon gave five
basic reasons why that great civillzation withered and died
(could these have ominous meaning for us today?):
1. The dignity and sanctity of the home was undermined.
2. Higher taxes were levied for public spending for free
bread and circuses for the populace.
3. There was a mad craze for pleasure. Sports became
more brutal and Immoral every year.
4. Great armaments were built while there was an inward
decay of individual responsibility.
5. Religion faded from faith into mere form, losing touch
with life, and was powerless to guide the people.
Next year the United States of America will be 200 yean
old. We are now m vartous stages of preparation for
celebrating the bicentenial. As we prepare ourselves for our
country's 200th birthday it might do us well to remember tbe
founding principles of our nation and realign OlU' alms.
Could it be that through these 200 years we might have
veered from our original course as a nation and history may be
repeating itself?
The average age of the world's great civillzations has been
only 200years. Those civilizations progressed from bondage to
spiritual faith, from faith to great courage, from courage to
liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to
selfishness, from selfishness to complacency, from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependence, and from
dependence back again to bondage. Where do we, as a nation ,
stand right now in this cycle?
Is history repeating itself'

kidneys.
You might not need those
medicines you are taking or
Dilantin and Navane.
DEAR READER - Your in such quantity if you give up
letter reminds me of my coffee entirely, which I
experience in a city hospital strongly recommend in your
clinic attended by a well- case. The drugs have tbe
known medical university opposite actions to tbe drug in
staff. I kept seeing patients your coffee and tea, caffeine.
For something hot to drink,
who came to the clinic
because they had burning in you can use decaffeinated
the pit of the stomach and coffee. You might substitute
ulcer s, mptoms. After they this part of the time as you
had been extensively studied withdraw from all that coffee
they
were
put
on you are drinking. Large
tranquilizers. No one asked amounts of coffee do mduce
them if they drank coffee or an anxiety state in some
how much. UsuaUy they were people.- Drop down to two
' washing their tranquilizers cups a day, then one, then
down with coffee . Since none, and replace as you go
coffee contains caffeine, a with decaffeniated products
powerful brain stimulant, the if you wish.
two counteracted each other.
Other substitutes include
Often
these
people hot It;monade, bouillon, clear
recovered entirely after they soups and if you want to go
stopped coffee and threw way out, hot sassafras tea .
away the tranquilizers. The For more information about
stomach symptoms were coffee write to me in care of
caused by the coffee.
this newspaper, P.O. Box
No, coffee is not injuring 15Sl, Radio City Station, New
your kidnesy. It does York, NY 10019. Send 50 cents
stimulate the kidneys to act, and a long, stamped, selfand the amount of liquid you addressed envelope, and ask
drink does the rest. All that for The Health Letter number
water has to go somewhere, 1-1, Coffee, Tea, Cola, Cocoa.
and the principal way of
When a heavy coffee
eliminating it is through the drinker stops abruptly he can

have headaches and withdrawal-type reactions. The
body gets used to all tbe
caffeine, so stop gradually.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have '
never been able to get a
satisfactory answer to the
question of why I have to get
up two or three times diU'ing
the night to urinate wben ' I
drink nothing before going to
bed. Where does the water
come from?
DEAR READER - Yow
body is over half water. over
70 per cent of the weight .-i&gt;f
your muscles is water, alld
you have water in the Oulcls jn
all the tissues.
When you lie down, if you
have an abundant amowtt of
Ouid in yOW' body, feet,
ankles or abdomen that has
accumulated over the day,
the kidneys will simply m~r
out more water from your
blood. Then, if you have a
small bladder or are nervous
and have sleeping problems
anyway, you may well have
to get up at night. 11)is
problem is independent ,of
prostate problems in men. In
this condition the bladder is
overloaded because of tbe
obstruction
from
the
enlarged prostate.

also for 52nd, 53rd, 54th, 55th, etc.

Texans, under agreement,
can send 10 senators into
Washington when they please

Old Glory has flown with 50 stars for 15 years, but there are
more than a few proposals around to add to that firmament
with a 51st state - and perhaps more.
The next state could be named Superior . Or possibly there
might be five more, all born of the present state of Texas.
The idea of new states is as old as the country 1tself. Some,
SIICh as one named Franklin, actually eXlsted for a few years Supreme Court 's one man-one vote dectston. Fearing dominabefore disappearing. Another, caUed Sequoyah, adopted a lion by the Los Angeles area, th e state senate , chosen on a
geographical basis, voted 22-16 to split the state at the
state constitution, but lost out to Republican party politics.
Tehachapi
mountain range about 50 miles north of Los Angeles
Texas still bas the right to divide itseif into fiv e sta tes to
create
the states of " North California" and " South
without approval of Congress - and there's a move afoot to do
just that because it would give the area 10 senators instead of California." However, the assembly, chosen on a population
basts a nd dominated by the south, easily rejected the plan.
two.
There've been proposals to spht up Idaho and Califorma ; to
Idaho - There was a proposal in the early 196011 to split
create new states out of what is now New Yori\ .City, the
',
Idaho
into two states. The north..south talk comes up every
District of Col~llJJ!., tllejlavajo Indian Rese.rv~lon, New
York's LOng Islap!:h ::.~/'Y!,Bnd 's Eastern Sharer: and Puerto tlme 1ssues m the legislature tend toward sectionalism.
Rico. There have Deeri'·proposals for other new silltes to be Histor ically the north..south rift goes back to the territorial
named Forgotonia, Aroostook, Jefferson, Winston , Indian days when the first cap1tol was established at Lewiston, then
pirated away to Boise. The rift nearly prevented Idaho 's ad
Stream and Vietbam.
Many have been whimsical or nothing mor~ than efforts to mission to the Union.
draw attention to tbe political plight of a region. A few have
been serious.
F'orgotonia ..- In 1973, Earl Gamm, then ~ and a Vietnam
Here's a look at ,some of them :
veteran studying drama at Western illinois University,
Superior- Congr~ granted the Upper Peninsula to Michi- proposed that 16 western illinois counties secede to form a new
gan - taking it away from Wisconsin - early in the 19th state called "Forgotonia" to dramatize how the state and
Century as a consolation prize for losing the Toledo Strip to federal governments had neglected that part of the state .
Ohio. Michigan state Rep. Dominic Jacobetti recently got Gamm appointed himself governor of Forgotonia; and was
invited to address the Illinois legislature. He did so, wearing a
legislative approval to spend $5,000 to study the feasibility of
creating a new state there, to be called Superior. If it did stovepipe hat and other Lincoln garb. The highwater mark of
suddenly find itself a state instead of an accumulation of 15 the Forgotonia drive came when the Mercer County board
' Michigan counties covered mostly with trees, it would rank voted unanimously to secede from Illinois.
' 42ndln size and 49th in population - and, opponents of the idea
Aroostook - There was a serious move to create another
say, Slat in wealth. DiSsident groups in seven adjacent
state
in Maine in 1843. The dispute is still called the "Aroostook
counties in Wisconsin have asked to join in.
County War ." The border between United States and Canada
" ...... l.i.
Jefferson - There was a movement in 1!141 to create the had not been settled at that tlme and residents thought they
"110verelgn state o( Jefferson" out of the northern tip of were being mistreated by Washington. The idea q~etl~ died.
Callfornla and tbe aoutherl) Oregon coast. Stan Delaplane, now
a ~cated travel writer of, The San Francisco Otronicle,
District of Columbia - There is a Statehood Party that
1I'Cll1 a ~tzer prize -~or his lighthearted rewrting of the
usually runs second or third in elections in Washington, D.C.
Jeffenon movement, which died with the beginning of World
The Republicans sometimes run behind them, and the
War r II on Dec. 7, 1941.'
Statehood Party now has a member on the city council. Bills
,
'
are introduced in Congress almost every session to make the
Callfornla
The most significant effort to separate
District a sta te , and they routinely die in committee.
;Oillfornla into two stateS came in 1966 shortly after tlje
~

-

~

AT LEFT, ABOVE - Employes of the new branch bank at Tuppers ~Iains were all
smiles Saturday at the recephon given them during an open house . An estlffiated 600 persons vis ited the grand opening of the Pomeroy National Bank branch all day on Saturday .
The employes, from the left, are Marilyn Robinson , Don Nelson (manago;r) and Mary
Grover. Employes of the main bank and the Rutland Branch aSSisted wtth the grand
opemng Favors were distributed to vis1tors.

Winston - Some 2,500 residents of Winston County, Ala.,
established the "Free State of Winston" in 1862,and asked both
sides in the Civil War to "leave us alone, wunolested, that we
may work out our political and financial destiny here in tbe
hills and mountains of northwest Alabama." Winston issued its
own paper money, but neither side left it alone. The county's
legislator, C.C. Sheats, was expeUed from the legislature and
later arrested for treason. He was released in 1864 without
being tried. An attempt to abolish Winston County failed.
Franklin - There briefly existed a state called Frank.lln m
what is now eastern Tennessee. Historians now refer to it as
the " Lost State of Franklin." John Sevier, a native Virginian,
was Franklin's first and only governor, chosen In a convention
in 1784 at the state's capitol, now Jonesboro, Tenn. But a
military man, Col. John Tipton, declared the new state illegal.
It started a war that wasn't settled until February, 1788, when
Sevier was defeated in a battle at Tipton's plantation. Sevier
later became Tennessee's first governor.
'
Eastern
Shore - Maryland's Eastern Shore juts out past
Otesapeake Bay into the Atlantic. There are periodic efforts
by legislators from the area to secede from Maryland and
form their own state. The efforts usually reach their height at
reapportionment time -when the Eastern Shore always loses
some representation.

Vietbam - A whlnmical letter ln a national news magazine
at the end of tbe Vietnam war suggested Alabama be turned
over to Vietnamese refugees because the ~tate is mostly rural
and its cllinate is !lomewhat like that of Vietnam. It suggested
the name could be chanoP.rl In ViP.thRm
Navajo- The Navajo Indian Reservation, which covers sec;
lions of northeast Ari2Dna, southeastern Utah and north·
western New Mexico, occasionally makes noises about
becoming a separate state. But the Navajo nation exists under
a treaty with the U.S. goverrunent and has authority very close
to that of a state anyway. Most of the dissatisfaction over tbe
years has stemmed from Indian frustrations with federal
overseers, and in the case of Navajo, this federal domination is
rapidly dwindlinR away .
Long Island - In 1967 the Long Island Association of Commerce and Industry passed a resolution favoring secession
from New York state and establishing Long Island \IS an independent state. The grpup conteilds the island, with a

l'.

I "

'

population of 2.5 million, could get far more federal aid as a
separate state than as a portion of New York.
m!llan Stream - In 1832 disgruntled residents of extreme
northern New Hampshire set up the republic of Indian Stream.
It was during the time the United States and Canada were
disputing a common boundary . There were a series of Jrld.
napings, America troops came into the area, and tbe territory
was finally made a part of New Hampshire in 1842 under tbe
Webster-Ashburton Treatv.

-

rna,

Puerto Rico - As many as 2.8 million Puerto Ricans
want to make their island the 51st state of tbe United States.
But that doesn't mean the move is any closer than It was 5l
years ago when Puerto Ricans gained U.S. citizenship.
But Puerto Rico receives more than $1.67 billlon a year ill
federal assistance ...:. without paying taxes. or providing votes
The most recent test of public opinloll was in 1967, when 80.l
per cent of the voters said they pl'eferred to remain a coq~·
monwealth, 38.9 per cent supported statehood, and .8 per cenl
said they preferred complete independence.
Sequoyah ~ On Nov. 7, 1905, tl)e residents of a new state, to
be called Sequoyah, approved a constitution by a margin of 61c:
land sept a delegation to Wash~n. They were membens..lll
five Indian tribes and had been promised by years of treat!~
- tbe latest only seven years old - that they would be ~
mltted to the union. But in 1908 President Teddy Roosevelt aiilc
the new state was a violation of Republican party policy,
declared that party politics superseded govenunent treatiet
with the Irtdians. He crushed the effort to establiah a separiilt
Indian state in what is now the eastern third of Oklahoma. ·The constitution written for Sequoyah became tbe f~.
tion of the Oklahoma constitution. The Great Seal of Sequo~
with only minor chan2es. became the seal of ()k)aboma
'- '

m¥

'"
New York City- In tbe 1989 New York City mayoral eiectlm
candidate JllllJJly Breslin proposed that tbe ell)' secede and
become a separate state. The proposal got little attention. But
in 1971; Rep. Bella Abzug brought It up again and got tbe
dorsement of three of the city's five borough presidents. lll;ie
argued that New York City deseMs to be a Illata becaueJI,II
budget t:; larger than any lltate 'a and that the city never g~ aa
much l!&amp;ck money as it spends. U admitted, New Yort Cl!f
:woul~ be the seventh most j)opuloWJ state in the uniClll. 'rl\ilt
tdea IS still kicking around, and occaeional notices of otlier
moves to make the city a state are aeen in the city's neWSpapers.
1

1'6-

I

CHESHIRE - The Gallia Coach Jim Polcyn made a
County Disciples opened its de fen sive cha nge whtc h
1975 season here Sunday wtth proved beneficial and hts
••
2!&gt;-7 VIctory over the Meigs bffens1ve unit pushed over
a
•
Warriors m the Amateur another TD in the third
Football League .
stanza on an e1g ht yard run
Following a scoreless ftrst by fullback dack1e Parsons.
period, Gallia County jumped Cremeans · k1ck sailed wide to
into a IHI lead following a the left.
In the fourth penod , Me1gs
punt fumble recovery near
the five yard line . Two
penaihes put the ball on the 10
where qua rterba c k Bob
Ratliff , substitutmg for the
injured Gary Kurtz , threw a
TD paSS to Larry Howell . The
By FRED DOWN
extra point attempt fatled
UPI Sports Writer
Me1gs took a 7-6 lead When
It's showdown time in the
quarterback Bob Werry hit Amencan League East--and
Ch1p Haggerty on a 54-yard both the Boston Red Sox and
bomb. Haggerty caught the Baltimore Orioles a re ready
ball , then outran the
The Orioles are staging one
I..., "
DISC iples' le£! de fe ns1ve of their late dr1ves like the 28safety . Paul Aikman 's ki ck 6 one that won them the
made 11 1-6 Meigs w1th 3:15 Eastern title m 1974. But the
left in the first half. St1ll later Red Sox, who folded a year
that same penod. Meigs tr1ed ago, are showing no signs of a
another long pass but cor- collapse.
nerback George Curry picked
And so. after 51-&gt; months,
11 off and returned to the end the AL has a showdown
AMATEUR GR!DffiON ACTION - Gary Hood, 185 lb. center (74) and 205 lb. cor·
zone, glVlng the Gallians the series the two.game set the
nerba ck George Curry and others on the sideline of tbe Gallia Disciples watch action on the
lea d
again .
Orland Red Sox Will play against the
"' ' field Sunday when the Disciples upended the Me1gs Warriors 2!&gt;-7 m the opemng game of the
•
Cremeans' kick pushed the Ortoles Tuesday and WedAmateur League season on the Kyger Creek High School fteld.
score to 13-7 al the half.
nesday
In the second half, Gallia
The Red Sox wtll go into the
:v~
· -------------------------------------

"•

lEV. HOW.UD C. llACK

W.l iO I

n. '"

••

..,

H.,..t, ,.,

Vf'L N

•••

punted to the Disciples' Dave
Burnett who broke loose for a
75 yard return before being
hauled down at the five. The
fma1 Gallia s1x-pointer came
moments later on a one yard
sneak by quarterback Bob
Ratliff . The extra point kick
was blocked.
Following that sco r~. Me1gs

could not move the ball and
los t ground on a jarring
tac'kle of runnin g back Bruce
Harris by Mike Wolfe . The
Disciples went into ball
control to run out the clock.
Mtke Hager was the top
ground gainer for Galha wtth
50 yards. Bob Martin had 43;
Jackte Parsons , 27, and

Ratliff, 28. Meigs had 20
yards rushing and 80 via the

air .
By Quarters
Me1gs
0 7 0 1)- 7
o 13 6 6-25
Gallia
Officials : Gary Fishe~,
referee; Dale Rothgeb, head
linesman; Marshall French,
umpire-field judge.

..

~i

v
-?

. ~~

-·~ ..

.
Bosox set for East showdown .

-

~· Spartan

pride hurt in loss

.,. ..

EAST LANSING, Mich . Buckeyes defense .
":(i;PI) - The physical m" We're a better defensive
":juries will heal with time , but team than a year ago ," said
":Michigan State IS saddled Hayes.
The most serious of the
~:With a classic case of hurt
'Jiride that could make for a MSU physical casualties was
hi ghly -tou ted . sophomore
' long football season .
tailback
Ted Bell, who was
" We still have a good
football team," coach Denny inserted into the starting
Stolz insisted in hushed tones lineup just before gametlme
.,fl)llowin g the Spartans • but sidelined before the first
)l,umihating 21·0 season- half was over.
Officials announced Sun"'Qpening loss to Ohio Stale,
-"but we have to get them day that Bell reinjured the
~1iealed .
same knee that benched hun
• "Mostly 1t's a lot of hurt the entire season last year
• ~»'ide s that have to be and will probably miss the
next few games.
•.mended," he said.
It also had been feared that
~ · ~ OSU coach Woody Hayes
: '!'as impressed With th e surgery would be needed for

-· .

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
;;.- NEVf YORK ( UPI) - Ed Garvey has the same habit so
"many others have. He gets a little carried away sometunes,
" and in th1s case, perhaps 1t was completely understandable.
•· ' The New England Patrwts had put 1t to a vote. After a good
" tleal of back and forth on the subJect underscored by some loud
"'raucous voices now and then, they voted no to proposition one .
" 1:1Jey decided to strike, and that meant they wouldn ' t play their
c:llnal preseason contest with the New York Jets Sunday at New
"Haven, Conn.
" ' As head of the NFL players' association, it now became
" appropriate for Ed Garvey to say somethmg about the
~ patri ots' actwn and he was right there ready With a statement
" 'tn Washington.
" Hopefully ," he sa1d, " this action w1ll bring the owners to
the bargainmg table m the spirit of compromise . We all admire
the courage of the New England Patriot team in helping to
bring about a settlement ."
The strike by the Patriots, Garvey added, was " an illustratiOn of how alienated the players have now become with the
" negotiatmg process. "
Garvey was only saying what any good union leader would,
and the only objec llon there is that he was taking one
"TIIustrahon by the players Without bothering to consider a far
·ffiore Important one by those who actually pay their salartes.
" Not the owners, but the fans.
" " The ones I talked to about the Patriots' strike and the
•wsslbilily of it spreading to the other NFL clubs didn ' t seem to
--care one way or another They voiced no resentment toward
either the players or the owners, only an unpassiveness and
indifference in what to them was merely another m a steady
': siiccession of labor strikes. From discussing the Patriots'
' action with the dozen or so professional football fans 1 did, I
• came away with the distinct Impression the fan protest would
be far less than anyone would imagine if the pro football
'J!&lt;:bedule was canceled for the entire season. For sure, few
,1iqusewtves would complain.
-- Posstbly there might have been a time when a player strike
causing the cancellation of an entire pro football schedule or
'"any other professwnai sport schedule would rank as a national
calam1ty, but not any more.
. People have too many other forms of dtvertisement to oc"':Qpy thetr tune and mterest. Besides, they are deeply involved
:-with their own daily problems like trying to deal with tbe rising
!~ost of food , gasoline, rent and medtcal and dental bills, so how
~ can they get worked up at all over anlissue like the pro football
'P,'layers being upset with the owners. The fans accepted a
'se~en-week walkout by the NFL players a year ago and that
'gOt them sort of used to no pro football. Somehow they'd find a
'Wily to struggle along without 1t even if they had to do so over
'M\ entire season.
1 know for certain some owners would almost welcome a
ii!ilwdown. They feel they' ve been pushed as far as they can
•be and appear ready to write off the season if it comes down to
th~t. Few players would actually be willing to go that far .
Maybe some say they would, but there's a world of difference
~tween saying something ·and doing it.
'"'~e Patriots held a meeting Sunday after their game with
'l:l'tl! Jets was canceled and said they hoped to gain the support
·)l.t,players on the other ~ NFL clubs. Personally, I think they
:J;qrve the good wishes of those players, but I doubt they 'll get
' their support.
~ ·)'or sure, they don 't have either the sympathy or support of
"tllefans. I think the players sense that and it's one of the things
' 11\at would keep t he m from ever really thinking of a strike m
'ffie lon g sense of the word.

star linebacker Pat McCiowry, who dislocated his
shoulder, but doctors successfully treated the injury
Sunday and he was expected
to be ready for this week 's
game agaipst nonconference
nval Mianu (Ohio).
Other wounded Spartans,
such as tailback Rich Baes,
defensive end Otto Smith,
safety Tom Graves and big
offensive
tackle
Tony
Bruggenthies, had suffered
their mjuries in pl'eseason
practice, but Stolz managed

to keep word from leaking
out.
Those players also are
expected back on the gridiron
for the Miami game, but they
may see only limited action in
some cases .
The Bucks escaped with
comparatively mild injuries .
linebacker Ken Kuhn suffered a shoulder separation
and
ankle
sprain,
trrepresmble tailback Archie
Griffin and Tun Fox got
bruised thighs and Nick
Buonamici sustained a pulled

hamstrmg .
" It was tough , man , really
tough," said Gnffin, who
gained more than 100 yards
for the 22nd straight regularseason game. " Three times I
got fingers m my eyes, but it
wasn't anything I dtdn 't ex-

·~ V•' ~

'

series w1th e tther a 41'.!-or a
3~,g am e lead, depending
upon the result of their game
with the Milwaukee Brewers
tonight. A split would pretty
much make the Red Sox
"safe" a nd a two .game
swee p
would
VIrtuall y
ehmmate the Onoles.
The teams prepped for the
big series Sunday With victortes - the Red Sox
defeating the Brewers 11-6 and
the Orioles beating the
Detroit Tigers 9-3. That left
the Red Sox w1th a four .game
lead w1th two weeks left m the
season
Carl Yastrzemski's single
drove in the tie-breakmg run
m the seventh innmg and
rookie sensation Fred Lynn
added a run.;;coring single in
the game-winning three-run
rally . Lynn had four straight
hits, ra1sed his RBI total to 99
and average to .336. Hank
Aaron h1t his 12th homer for

now twice as good" as when
11

he gained 988 yards in his
rookie year, ran 11 times for
44 yards, caught four passes
for another 42 yards and
scored a touchdown.
The 245-pound fullback personally accounted for the
final 40 yards of an 81-yard
scoring drive. In four straight
plays, Clark rumbled 21
Yl\rds after catching a pass,
then stepped off runs of three
and 15 yards and climaxed
the drive by hurdling into the
end zone from one yard away .

Dave Green, who got off
several beautiful punts to
keep the Saints m poor fteld
position, fmished off the
scoring in the second half
with field goals of 20 and 43
yards.
Rookie halfback Stan
Fritts, who dashed 44 yards
on a draw play and wound,up
the game's leading rusher
w1th 90 yards in nine carries,
could " very possibly" draw a
starting assignment m the
first regularseason game,
said Brown.
" He's a hard-runmng ,
hardblocking battler,"
Brown sa1d of Fntts, fresh
out of North Carolina State .
"We like his style."
Cmcinnall fmished 1ts
exhibition season with a 4-.'l
record, while New Orleans,
PAHACHUfE rEAM
WARENDORF, Germany
(UP!) - American athletes
won two events Sunday at the
World
Formation
Parachutmg championship.
In the 10-man competition,
the U.S. team rolled up a total
of 100 points in 163.85 seconds.
Australia was second at 100
points in 175.15 seconds, while
France placed third also with
100 points and a timing of
177.75 seconds.
76ERS CUr fSCHOGL
PillLADELPHIA ( UPI) The Philadelphia 76ers an·
nounced Sunday they had cut
forward John Tschogl, a
three-year NBA veteran.
Ts&amp;iogl, a &amp;-foot-6 forward,
played his first two years
with Atlanta before coming to
the 76ers. He played in 39
games last season for
Philadelphia.
l IICI
n'i"~'

OEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS-MASON AR£A
CHESTER L. TAN fill E HILL
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ct1y Editor
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)3 .50 . three months . $7 50
L bscnpllon pnce in c ludes

unday l1mcs Scnltne,'-'1'-----'

fwlns 10, A's 8
Danny Thompson's threerun homer was the big blow of
a six..-un first-inning oUtburst
by Mirmesota. Bill Butler
went 5 1-3 innings to win his
fourth game despite homers
by Oakland's Gene Tenace
and Claudell Washington.
Glenn Abbott was the loser.

Phils remazn 5% out

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
pect."
Mike Schmidt would trade
Baggett was intercepted m h1s 36 homers and Steve
three times by Craig Carlton will gladly swap hts
Cassady , fumbled the bail 13losses for the same elusive
away on another occamon pnze- a pennant for th e
and broke up two other plays Philadelphia Phtllies.
simply by fallmg down .
No question, Schmidt has
more than delivered toward
the Phillies' fadmg hope of
ca t ch mg the Pittsburgh
Ptrates in the National
League East, while Carlton ,
who was counted on to win 20
games, has been a major
which hopes to have Manning disappointment at 13-13.
back for the Washington
" I can't make up for those
Redskins m its regular· 13 losses bulif I could, we'd
season opener, was 2-4 for the be in better shape, that's for
preseason.
sure," sa1d Carlton, Sunday's

Redskins face Spartans
in second tilt Saturlhy
Even though Miami (Ohio)
ran up 50 pomts against
Marshall, Redskins coach
Dick Crum is worried his
team ' s 24-game unbeaten
streak is m jeopardy.
The
Redskms
meet
MIChigan State thts Saturday,
a team blanked 21-() by Ohio
State in their Big Ten season
opener.
"We weren't ready today to
play Michigan State," Crum
said after the w1n over
Marshall Saturday. " If we
play the ftrst part of the
Michigan State game the way
we played today , we'll be out
of the contest early ."
Ball State won its first MidAmerican Conference game
38-28 over Toledo and Ohio
Umversity hed Central
Michigan 6-6 m the other
MAC game.
Bowling Green edged
Brigham Young 23-21, Akron
defeated Western Mtchtgan
27-21 and Kent State beat
Northeast Louisiana 31·29 m
games involving other MAC
teams.
Cincmnati downed Richmond 19-6, Eastern Kentucky
edged Davton 3!1-24, Ashland
be•t :"erf'ts State 34-JO, Thiel
beat Case-Western Reserve
35-21, Youngstown State
blanked Central State 10-0,
Albion got by Defiance 1!1-3,
Findlay shut out Earlham 370, Bluffton beat Taylor 15-8
and Hiram edged John
Carroll 1!1-7. ·
Seven Fumbles for foledo
In Ohio Conference action,
Wittenberg opened defense of
its league title with a J!Hl win
over Baldwin-Wallace,
Capital beat Heidelberg 1&amp;-7,
Denison defeated Marietta
14-6 and Ohio Wesleyan
stopped Ohio Northern 21-ll.
In other games involving
OC teams , Westminster
defeated Muskin~um IHI on

Yankees 6, Indians Z
Hunter went seven innings
for his 22nd victory--second
highest of his major league
career - with Tippy Martinez
pitching two scoreless in·
nmgs in relief for New York.
Roy White's homer and runscoring hits by Graig Nettles
and Rick Pell'lpsey gave the
Yankees a 3-0 lead in the third
inning and they added three
m the seventh. Boog Powell
and Rico Carty homered for
Cleveland.

two field goals, Otterbem
stopped Manchester 26-0,
DePauw downed Wooster 288, Mount Union rolled over
Geneva 5!&gt;-7, Kenyon beat
Bethany 24-12 and Centre
blanked Oberlin 28-0.
Toledo fumbled seven
tunes and lost the ball five
times to Ball State, leading to
the Cardinals' first-ever MAC
win and thetr second victory
of the season. Ball State
began competition this year
m the conference.
Rocket quarterback Gene
Swick, last year's national
offensive leader, completed
15 of 27 passes for 158 yards.
Central Mtchigan freshman
Rabe Savich of Yugoslavia
traded two field goals with
Ohio University's Gary
Homer as the Otippewas kept
their unbeaten streak going
at 14 With the MAC tie.
Wilhelm Scores fwice
Savich ktcked field goals of
26 and 36 yards and Homer
booted them from 31 and 38
yards out.
Tom Wilhelm scored twice,
on runs of one and 42 yards,
and Jim Enbick kicked a held
goal to lead Akron past
Western Michigan, although
the Broncos' Don Matthews
had Ulree touchdowns in a
second-half comeback.
The Golden Flashes saved
head coach Dennis Fitz.
gerald's KSU debut by
withstanding a gallant
second-half comeback by
Northeast Louisiana .
The Indians had pulled to
within two points of Kent, 31·
29, and looked to he ready to
score agam when Jim
Whiting sacked Joe Bruner
for an eight-yard loss wtth
3:40 left in the game. A 61yard field goal attempt on
fourth down by Northeast's
Dave Shraer fell short with
2:5:&gt; remaining.

wmner of the Phillies' 13-7
triumph over the Chicago
Cubs.
Added Schmidt, who belted
his 35th and 36th homers to
take over the major league
lead : " I'd still trade any
home run title for a world
championship because that's
what 1t's all about." Schmidt
also had a run-scormg single
to give him four RBis for the
day .
The wm at least enabled the
Phillies to remain 51-&gt; games
back of first-plac e Pittsburgh.
" In order for us to tum it
around," Schmidt said,
" we've got to beat the Pirates
four out of the five games we
have left with them. And to be
truthful , we can't lose more
than two of the 13 games we
have left."
In addition to Schmidt's
homers, D1ck Allen also
belted a tw&lt;H"un shot for the
Phils and pinch-hitter Tim
Hosley delivered a grand
slam for the Cubs off rookie
Randy Lerch in the mnth .
Elsewhere m the National
League Sunday, Pittsburgh
kept rolling with a 4-3 victory
over Montreal, St . Louis
downed New York 6-2,
Houston put away San D1ego
4-2, Los Angeles shaded
Atlanta 3-2 and Cincinnati
drubbed San Francisco 9-3
after losing the doubleheader
opener to the Giants 4-2.
In the American League,
Boston beat Milwaukee 8-6,
Baltimore topped Detrmt 9-3,
New York downed Cleveland
6-2, Minnesota outlasted
Oakland 10-8 and Kansas City
stopped California 10-4
Pirates 4, Expos 3
Pmch-hitter Duffy Dyer

singled home the tying run In
the eighth inning and when
Tony Scott bobbled the ball in
right, pinch..-unner Miguel
DOone raced home with the
winning run as PlttsbiD'gh
reduced the magic number
for
clinching
to
10.
Sanguillen's run-scoring
double and Richie Zisk's 19th
homer accounted - for the
other two Pirates' runs.
Cardinals I, Mets 2
A sacrifice Oy by Keith
Hernandez and Ted Slm·
mons' single produced a pair
of third inning runs that
enabled St. Louis to foll New
York's Tom Seaver in his bid
for his 22nd victory. Cards'
reliever Mike Garman
preserved rookie John
Denny's lOth win by pitching
out of a bases.Joaded one-out
jam in the eighth. A Jacket
Day crowd of 50,546-largest
m Busch Stadium historyturned out.
Dodgen 3, Braves Z
Ron Cey's two-run sixth
inning homer, nis 24th, gave
Los Angeles its sixth win the
last seven games. Cey's two
run shot gave hlm 92 RBis
and Davey Lopes stole his
71st base. Doug Rau (14-9)
outdueled Atlanta 's Carl
Morton (17-16) for the win.
Astros 4, Padres Z
Eilos Cabell banged out
three singles and drove home
two runs to help Houston foil
Randy Jones' bid for his 20th
victory . J .R. Richard ( 11-9 )
scattered nine hits including
Johnny Grubb's two-run
ninth inning double to gain
the win . Jones, still losing
ground to Seaver for the NL
cy Young Award, is now 1!110.

I

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service?
You get that
right along with
our low rates..:'

Along w1th our famous low cost auto ~no te c 1 1 0n c omes
a p rom1se ol promo t pe rso11a1 serv 1ce So yo u don 1
ha•. e to g1ve up a thnlg to get ou r lovv rates Yo u JUSt
have to tak e ad vantag e of them

Steve Snowden
1258 Powell Street
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 992-7155

,_,.....-.
. Uke a good neighbor,
. ~. State Farm is there.
STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMO BILE INSURANCE COMPAN Y
Home Otk~ Bloon·ungton llhnoiS

p 7436

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•

Bengals blank Saints
CINCINNATI (UPI) Oteer up John, it wasn't the
Super Bowl you lost.
The 20-0 shutout John
North's New Orleans Samts
gave up to the Cincmnatl
Bengals Saturday mght was
only the finale of the
exhibition season, but North
took it hard.
He threw a mild fit in the
locker room.
"We were out-played, outcoached
and
outeverythinged," North
moaned. " They took 1t to us
every way they could."
Saints star quarterback Archie Manning was out with an
injury, and backups Bobby
Scott and Larry Cipa couldn't
move the team beyond
Cmcinnati's 31-yard line .
"We were never in the ball
game," complained North.
"Not even from the begin·
ning. I've still got four cuts to
make. I've never seen (my)
people stand around like that.
"I felt we might move the
ball," continued North,
throwing his hat down, "but
we didn't. We didn't ever
have a drive going . We had
nothing going ."
BengalsJloss Paul Brown
called hiS team's play "a
workmanlike effort.
"We tried to control the
game with defense, and I'm
glad we apparently got by
with no serious injuries," he
said. "We're going into the
regular season reasonably
healthy."
Cincinnati quarterback
Ken Anderson and fullback
Boobie Clark played only the
first half, but they dished out
enough to handle the Saints,
obviously
missed
who
Manning .
Anderson tuned up for the
Bengals regular-season
opener here next Sunday
against Cleveland by hitting
13 of 19 passes for 137 yards,
including a 27-yard touchdown peg to Isaac Curtis.
Clark, boasting that he is

th e Brewers
Don Baylor and Elrod Hendricks hit two..-un homers
and AI Bumbry scored three
runs for the Orioles, who have
won 10 of thetr last 12 games.
Mike Cuellar was routed in 2
1-3 innings but rookie Paul
Mitchell allowed ftve·hits and
no runs in the last 6 2-3 innmgs to wm his thtrd game
for the Orioles . Ray Bare
suffered the loss for Detroit.
Jim Hunter won his 22nd
game as New York defeated
Cleveland &amp;-2, Minnesota beat
Oakland 10-8, Kansas City
downed California 1!14 and
Texas topped Oticago ~ in
other AL games .
In the National League, it
was Pittsburgh 4 Montreal 3,
St . Louis 6 New York 2,
Philadelphia 13 Chicago 7,
Los Angeles 3 Atlanta 2,
Houston 4 San Diego 2 and
Cincinnati over San Fran·
cisco 9-3 after a 4-2 loss.

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' -Tbe Dallv Sentinel, Mlddle_p ort·Pomeroy, 0 .. 1\llnnA•v, Sept. 15, 1975,

Nicklaus World Open champ
Nicklaus started the day at
2 under par, five strokes
behind Tom Weiskopf. But as
the leaders continued to
suffer bogeys In the tricky
wind, Nicklaus played a
"good thinking round"
without a bogey and chalked
up birdies at the fourth and
isth holes for a 69.
Casper dropped a couple of
strokes to one under early
Sunday but moved back to
four under at the 15th and
sald he thought he would
wrap up the victory with a
birdie at the par 5, 16th.
"I felt after I hit my second
shot at 16 that I was going to
win the tournament," said
Casper.
But his second shot went In
the sandtrap and be had to
settle for a par and finished
with a pair of pars to tie
Nicklaus.
Casper's drive on the par-4
first hole in the playoff went

PINEHURST, N. C. (UPI)
- Jacll · Nicklaus let the
leaders faher In the wind
while he picked up a playoff
victory Sunday In the World
Open golf tournament.
"When you get PinehW'st
with wind and they put the
pihsln the corners, you've got
to think," sald Nicklaus, who
sank a short par putt on the
first sudden-death hole to
defeat BUly Casper. "That's
what's so great about the

tournament.''
All week Nicklaus bad
talked about the famed
Pinehurst No. 2 coW'se being
one of his favorite COW'ses
because it's where be won the
1959 NortbSouth amateur at
age 19.
" I won here as an amateur
and I wanted to put my name
In the books as a pro, too," he
sald after picking up the
$40,000 first prize. "You
always like to win on' a great

course."

In the roQgh and he missed
the green. He chipped about
seven feet short and missed,
giving Nicklaus his lith
playoff victory In 18 trtes.
Nicklaus sald 1975 has been
"the best year of golf I've
played. But whether Its the
best year record-wise, that's
questionable."
He has five victories and 13
top-10 finishes in 15 tour·
naments, with winnings of
$294,2li3 for a good lead
enroute to the 1975 money
title.
Weiskopf soared to a 75
Sunday and finished alone ln
third place at 281. He put his
drive In the woods on the final
hole and bogeyed, knocking
him out of the playoff.
Second-round leader Pat
Fitzsimons, winner of the Los
Angeles Open , also shot a 75
Sunday and finished fourth at
282, one stroke ahead of Ed
Sneed.

/

Irish open season tonight
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sporta Writer
The script is the same
every year.
Sprlng practice starts .. .
college coaches everywhere
clamor about competing with
the Oklahomas, Southern
CaUforniasandOhio States ...
and then comes that first
unfortunate full college
weekend when sweet dreams
tum lnto harsh realities.
While many of those teams
harboring great expectations
were shot down by college
football's pereruUal powerhouses Saturday, Boston College hopes to move back Into
national prominence on
television tonight by tackling
an emotionally charged
Notre Dame squad, playlng
Its first game under new
coach Dan Devine.
The Fighting Irish have
won their last 11 openers and
are 7'n-point favorites, but
Devlne Isn't taking "the
Eagles lightly.
"Our coaching staff and
players are alert to the fact
that
College is a team
with experience, talent and
motivation," said Devlne .
"And I can tell you all of us
have a healthy respect for
Joe Yuklca 's team."
And with good reason.
The Eagles, whose dream
Is to challenge Penn State for
supremacy ln the East, have
not appeared In a bowl game
since 1942 but they won their
final six games last year and
sport a weJfbiiilincicfatiack.
Two 1teys to that dream are
quarterbacll Mike Kruczek,
who completed an NCAA
record 68 percent of his
passes last fall, and fullback
Keith Barnette, who rushed
for 1,097 yarda and led the
nation In scoring with 134

BOiltoo

for the Buckeyes.
Wisconsin's dreams were
spurred by Billy Marek, who
led the Big Ten ln rushing last
year. But when Michigan
held Marek to just 58 yards,
all Badger hopes went by the
wayside. The fifth ranked
Wolverines
trounced
Wisconsin 23-6 as Gordon Bell
plied up 210 yards and a
touchdown.
The Big Eight figured to be
the usual two-team race with
Oklahoma and Nebraska
fighting for the crown. But
judging from each team's
opener, the race is aU but
over.
Oklahoma, the nation's top
ranked team, got a sterllng
perfonnance from Its second
and third string, particularly
Horace Ivory and Jim Cuibreath, who each scored two
TDs and comblned for 221
yards ln a 62-7 rout of Oregon
State.
No. 7 Nebraska, althoQgh
playing at home, had a
surprisingly tough time with
Louisiana State, shadlng the
Tigers 1().7. The Cornhuskers,
favored by 15 points, needed a
37-yard field goal by Mike
Coyle and a five-yard TD
pass from Terry Lock to Bob
Thomas to gain the victory.
Second-ranked
Southern
CaUfornla gave notice to
Pacific Eight dreamers who
figured things might be
easier this time around now
that Anthony Davis has
graduated. The defending
n a tl on a I
cham pi o n s
steamrollered Duke 35-7
Friday night and In the
process found the perfect
replacement for DavisRicky Bell, a Junior who
rushed for a school record 256

Wallace 0
Capital 17 Hldelberg

7
o•nlson 14 Marietta 6

' Findlay 37 Earlham o
Hlrom 10 John corroll

7

L. T .. Pet .

,Na,t;on:~.~eaguo
0 833
0 800
w.. L. Pet. GS
0 .600 Piltsburgh
84 63 .57 1
0 500 Ph i ladelphia 79 69 .534 s lJ~
0 333 St Louis
77 71 .520
1v,
75 74 .503 10
New York
L. . T . . Pel Chicago
71 78 .m
14
3 0 .571 Montreal
65
83
.439
19'"
3 0 .500
West
4 0 429
w.. L.. Pet. GB

I
I
2
3
4

'3

3
2
Central

Baltimore

W,
4
3
3

Cinci nnati
Houston

x -P•ffsburgh
Cleveland

2

0 333

4

WPd

•'

W . . L. T. Pet .
5
1 0 .833
3 3 0 500

Oak.lan&lt;;l
Kansas"tity
Denver

.soo·

3

3

0

f'

4

1 250

San Otego

National Conference
East
W. , L. T. Pet.
NY Giants
4 2 0 .667
Philadelph ia
3 3 0 .500
3 3 0 .500
St Louis
4 3 0 571
Washing ton
2 4 0 . 333
Dallas
Central
W . . L. . T . . Pet .
2 3 1 417
M innesota
2 4 0333
Chicago
2 4 0 .333
Green Bay
Detroit
2 '0333
West
W •. L . - T . . Pet .

Los Angeles

5

1

0 .833

Atlanta
San Francisco
New Orl eans

3
3
2

3
3
4

0 .SOO
0 .500
0 333

• - Cin cinnati
98 52 .653
Los Angeles
81 69 .540 17
San Francisco 12 78 .480 26
Sa n Diego
68 81 .456 29112
Atlanta
65 85 .433 34
Houston
59 91 393 39
• -clinched divtsion title
Saturday's Results
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 1
San Francisco 9 Cincinnati 2
New York 6 St. Louis 2
Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 2
Los Angeles 6 Atlan ta o
Sunday's Results
Houston 4 San Diego 2
Sl . Louis 6 New York 1
Los Angeles 3 A tl anta 2
Pittsburgh A Montreal 3
Philadelphia 13 Ch1cago 7
San Fran A C1nc1nnat i 2, l si
Cin 8 San Frillnclsco 3. 2nd
Monday ' s Games
(All T1mes eon
Pilfsburgh (Reuss 16-11 and
Rooker 12-9) at Chicago ( Bon ham 13 lJ and Prall 0 1). 2, 1

The plan, drafted early In
the year by Rep. Paul Fin·
dley, R-ID., calls for a new
system of federal aid to land
grant universities. The
universities, in tum, would
use the money to set up expanded and continuing
programs of aid In boosting
food production through
educational lnstl tutlons in
hungry naUons alroad.

Northwestern St . 21 Fort
Hav.s 20
Oklahoma 62 Oregon 7
Oklahoma St. 34 Wichita St . 0
RIce 2.4 Houston 1
TeMas A&amp;M 7 Mississippi o
TeM.as 46 Colorado St . 0
Texas Tech 31 Florid' St. :zo
Ari'zona St : rs•~tashlngton 12
Bowling Green 23 Brigham
young 21
•
Colorado 3.4 California 27
ld 111 h 0 st 1~ w om tnq ~
· ·
Y
•
Montana Sl,• Soutn Dak.ota 17
N. A~ I zona 3&lt;4 UC Riverside 30
San Diego St. 35 Oregon St . 0
San .Jose Sf. 13 Santa Clara 0
So . M iss. 14 Weber State 10
Texas A&amp; I 43 Hawaii 9

UCLA 37 Iowa State 21
Utah St . 13 Uloh 7

77

72 .517

71 74
63 87

11
490 IS
420 2S if~

55 9' 369 33

West
W.

L. . Pet . GB

Oakland
90 sa 608
Kansas Cily
83 65 .561
1
Te xas
73 76 490 17 11~
Chi cago
69 77 473 20
Minnesota
68 77 .469 10 '1~
California
67 82 450 23 1f1
. Saturday's Results
Oakland 8 Minnesota 5
Milwaukee 9 Boston 6, 1st
Boston 6 Milwaukee 3, 2nd
Cleveland 7 New York 1, 1st
New York 4 Cleveland 3, 2nd
Texas 8 Chicago 7. 10 jnn
Balli more 8 Detroil 0
Ca l 1fornia 6 Kansas City 2
5unday'i Ruults
Baltimore 9 Detroit 3
Kansas C1ty 10 California 4
Minnesota 10 Oakland 8
Boston 8 Milwaukee 6
New York 6 Cleveland 2
Texas 9 Chicago 8, 13 lnn
Monday's Games
(All Times EDT)
Oakland (Blue 19-11) at Texas
(Perry 16-16) , 9 p.m
Chicago &lt;Osteen 7-14) at
Kansas City (Splittorff 8-8 },
8 30 p .m .
California (Pactwa 0-01 ar
Minnesota CBiyleven 14 -8 ), 9
p.m .
Milwaukee (Colborn 10 · 10) at
Boston (Moret 13-3), 7: 30p .m .
Tuesdav's Games
Oakland at Texas , n
Chicago at Kansas City , ri
California al Minnesota . n
Baltimore at Boston, n
New York at Milwaukee , n
Cleveland at Detr oit . n

Linescores

College
gn"d scores

W . . L. . Pet . GB
88 61 .591
84 65 564 A

51. Louis
102 000 12x- 6 10 0
Seaver, f-\811 (3), Stone (6),
Sanders (8) and Grote ; Dennv,
Garman (8) and Simmons. WP Oenny (10 -SL LP -Seaver {21 -9).

,- -

(1st game)
Cincinnati
000 011 OOD----2 10 1
San Franclsc 010 001 20X- 4 9 0
Nolan , McEnaney (8) and
Plummer ; Dressier . Lavelle
(7), Heaverlo (7) and Rader .
WP -Heaverlo (3-1). LP -Nolan
(13 9). HRs -Rader {5th), Cn t1veros (2nd) .
(2nd game)
Cincinnati
300 000 OSD--8 12 0
San Franclsc 020 000 001- 3 7 0
Darcy. Easlwick (9) and
Werner; Minton. Lavelle (8),
Moffitt (9) and Rader. WP ·
Darcy (10-5). LP -Minton (0 1).
H R Crowle-v &lt;lstl .

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Dear Helen:
'
•• I've been trying to formulate a

•

•"

••
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:

· I put yoiD' questkm to one lclmtllt and one melelll'ologlst,
both of wbom looked wise, and rea ved comments. Then I
opened our local newepaper (The Sacrammto BEE) and
P."Owd again that coincidences leek me out. The cartoon,
':9AUCUS," by "Hugo," llhowed an avid uaer of aeroc10ls,
mourning aa she llpribed, "Thla full about spray cans
destroying tile atmAiphet e Ia rldlculowi! If we should ever run
out of natural orme, I'm !Aft It will be produced artlfldally
and marketed ••• IN SPRAY CANS!"
_ My only obaervatiGn: Wouldn't pumplng replenlalunent
ozone Into the sky be 10111ewbat like cooling the ocean with ice
cubes?- Tremendous Job!- H.

A

Dear Helen:

SljOCKED

•

near Shocked,
What's Indecent about Items almollt every woman uses for
over 30 years of bet Ufe? In a day when - flnally -we need no
!Qoger whisper about body functions, menstruation, sex and aU
U1QSe normal thing~, why shouldn't personal hygiene
p.:oduclll be advertl8ed on TV? If you're shocked by mention of
a panitary pad, or even a male contraceptive- then you're too
eallily shocked, say I! - H.

Dear Helen:
, • I really had to do some high gear saleswomanship to get
lOY husband, Dlrk,eold on the idea of havlng a baby. But now
!fl!ll she's 2 years old and the apple of Daddy's eye, he wants
another child. In fact, he's really nagging me. Says HE should
Wlil this one, as be 1081 the first argument.
~~ · Dirk doesn't know tbe work Involved. He's away all day
lii\g, then comes home to an angel. I'm here when she shar~na her horns on me!
, . . He says two children are just right. I ssy one's enoQgh!
~of the expense, among other things. I love little Beverly,

.

heritage house
-

l

FOR THE ,.
PROTECTION !.
YOU NEED-.·

but-

Play it safe anct-oare

)

It may be time to
have your preaent
policy updated.

Let's Faile Soon

•
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samsonite

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Portable Furniture

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1!89.·
• Mrs.
LoUise

(5th), Tenace (26th), washing ton ~lOth l

Houston
100 010 020--4 10 0
San Diego
000 000 002-2 9 1
Richard, Niekro (9) and
Jutze ; Jones, Frisella (8) and
' Kendell . WP -Richard (11 -9)
LP -Jones &lt;19 -10) .

==================

Greta Simpson, Mrs.
Stewart and Mrs.
letha Morris were named to
the. nominating committee
. $Clli!duled to report at the
~9Y. 13 meeting at the Webb

·.
•

American League
Cleveland
000 200 D00--2 7 1
New York
003 000 30x-6 10 1
Waits, Buskey (7) and AShby ; :
Hunter, Martinez
(8)
and
Munson . WP -Hunter (22-13) . ,
LP · Waits (4 · 2). HRs · White

.,

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we gl~ Hrvlce '"'· when

.'

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·'

..

Mobile home• are sptclal
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P"-

home.
For devotions, Mrs. Webb
read the 37th Psalm. The
Lord's Prayer was given ln
unison, and Mrs . Lillian
Weese gave the thOQI!ht for
the day. Mrs. Bernice Carpenter read "Why Worry".
Mrs. Letha Morris gave "The
Greatest Charity", and Mrs.
Webb read "Faith, Hope and

Love".
The travellng prize, won by
Mrs. Lillian Weese, was
donated by Mrs. Isabelle
Simpson . . Others attending
were Wilson Carpenter ,
William Stewart, Ralph
Webb, Bert Grimm and
Melanie Weese.

;Grange elects officers

(10th). Powell (22ndl. Carty
(18th).

307 Spring Ave. ·
· Pomeroy, 0.
m-2318

enjoys picnic

''
';RACINE - The annual
picnic of the Past Officers
Club of Racine Chapter 124,
O,E.S. held Thursday at the
~C!Q)e of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
q,jpun, Letart Falls.
· •In the absence of Mrs.
t..BU..a Circle, president, Mrs.
&amp;alph Webb presided. A
Bicentennial project was
discussed along with the
observance In 1976 to comQ\I!_morate the founding of
th~. Raclne Chapter 75 years

Pomeroy
~

0

MIIIIt I cave In (and blo1110m out)? - NOT SOlD ON
BEING PREGNANT AGAIN
" 'tf' ~f-.:':
'., . ~.
DearNot': •
' lfYI)Il can't agree jllllt DOW, why not table the decision for
aiiother· six 111011tha or so? Your attitude migbt change once
Beverly is past the "terrible two's." Or Dirk's migbt-once he
explores the cost of orthodonture, children's clothes, college,
and such.
.. (In case he keeps pitching- and wins- relax, "N. S.":
1/le second one is usually easier and more fun. -If

~r;tub

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
!Ql W. Main

+++

•
·" I'm utterly disgu8ted with the TV advertising lately.
They're allowing things I never dreamed would be mentioned :
feminine pereonala, even more peraonal than last year's
"f!Pray ," If this continues, they'll be pitching male contraceptives next on TV. Your thougbta on the subject?

Class members
stage party

---

regarding the

Dear C and C:

~

-

lbeory

IIC!mtiflc llludy.
•
:: Slnee ozone can be produced commercially, what is the
reaaon for going througb all the hllllllle of gettlng aeroaol C8IUI
banned? Why can't we manufacture enough ozone and release
it, to coWJterbalance the effect of the Duorocarbons?
•• Since o11011e can be proG!ced commerdally, what Is the
rea1011 for going througb all the hllllllle of gettlng aeroeol C8IUI
banned? Why can't we manufacture enough ozone and release
It,. to COWlterbalance tile effect of the Duorocarbons?
Allo, since o1011e Is produced by ll8htnlng, won't nature
take care of tile problem herself by causing more thunder
storms? Isn't it true that we have been having more heavy
ll8htnlng atorms In recent )'t!lll'l?
Polllibly you have a IIC!entlst friend wbo could make
oomments on my letter?. - CURIOUS AND CONCERNED

..

University leaders have
been enthusiastic about the
program's potential for
stepping up efforts to Improve food production in
hungry nations.
"The program . .. provides the mandate we
have sought for many years
- to .wor~ as partners with
the f~deral government,
using the power of science
and education to help feed our
hungry neighbors," said
Elmer Kiehl, dean of
agriculture at the University
of Missouri and chairman of
the agricultural division of
the National Association of
the State Universities and
Baltimore
130 003 11~9 12 2 Land Grant Colleges.
Detroit
000 300 OOQ--J 9 1
In
another
recent
Cuellar , Mitchell (3) and
Hendricks ; Bare, Walker (5), statement, Chancelor Daniel
LaGrow (7) and Freehan . WP - G. Aldrich of the University
Mitchell D -Ol . LP -Bare (8-12).
HRs Hendricks (8thl. Baylor of California, lrvlne, and
(22nd l
president-elect
of
the
Milwaukee
000 320 01()---.6 13 0 association of universities,
Boston
010 004 30x- 8 12 3 praised the program as "a
Slaton, Murphy (6 ), Austin significant new vehicle" for
( 7 }, Anderson (7) and Por ter ;
world hunger.
Lee, Willoughby (5), Drago (8) fighting
and F1sk , Montgomery (5). WP - Aldrich called the plan the
Wiltoughby (5·21 . LP -Murphy
(1 .7) . HRs Aaron [12th), Lynn most significant event In the
(21th) .
history of U.S. land grant
Oakland
010 003 31Q-- 8 12 2 colleges since their creation
Minnesota
600 202 OOx- 10 15 4 ln 1862.
Abbott, S1ebert (S), Lindblad
Findley said the program
(61 and Tenace ; Buller , John son (6), Burgmeler {7) and can include efforts
to
Roof
WP -Butler (4 .4). LP Abbott (5 -4)
HRs -Thompson strengthen research

~

W.

tlilmlna ozone la)"er of tile atmoophere that 18 now Ul1dei' close

...

set for sale

~

A 'Difftl'alt' Qaeltloa

the meetlng, and announced a
APPLE GROVE - A
dlstticl meetplg In Athens, · •
rummage sale wail plllnnl!d
Sept: . 21. .'!'itree birthdays :
for oct: 13-15 dtJrlng a recent
were observed,-and memben .~
meetlng of the Apple Grove
were served refreshments by :
United Methodist Women at
Mrs. Slilrley Ables and Mrs. :
the church. The sale will be at
the Community Hallin Letart Allee Balser.
Attending besides those :
from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. each
named were Mrs. Edith ~
days.
Mrs
Betty
Shiveley Manuel, Mrs. Iona Hupp, :
prese~ted the program which Mrs. Lucllle Rhodes, Mrs ...,:
opened with the group singing Bertha Roblnson, Mrs. Eileen ..;
Buck, Mrs. Florence
. Smith •
"Showers of Blessings" with
and
Mrs.
Julia
NorriS.
Mrs . Bess Parsons at the
... --- - · ·
·""·
piano. Mrs. Dolly WoHe gave
BIRTHDAY HONORED
a prayer. The program was
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Roush, :·
on Jude with members
Middleport,
entertained ~
reading verses. A question
and answer period followed. Sunday with a dinner par!f In ~·
· Mrs. Donna Hill presided at celebration of the recent :·
birthday of their son, David, ~
4. Joining the other Roush ;f
children,. Shelley,
. . Lori'1 •• ·
Kimberly, Terri and Bran- ~
don, were Mr. and Mrs. :·
Burrell Dawson, New Haven. :
Mrs. Edith Roush, David's ::·
grandmother, was unable to : ·
attend. Cake and ice cream :
Members
of
the were served following the :
Homebuilders Class of the dinner.
:
N
Middleport Church of Christ
were in Athens Tuesday night
See The
to stage a party for 57
patients at the Athens Mental
Latest in
Health Center.
Games were conducted
Fall Shoe
with prizes awarded to the
winners, and refreshments
were served. Travellng to
Styles
'
Athens were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Mrs .
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Reva
Beech, Mrs . Coleen Van
Your Thom MeAn Store
Meter, Edward Evans and
~iddleport, Ohio
Mrs. Nora Rice.

Findley's plan, initially
offered as a separate bUI, was
later adopted as an amend·
ment to the House's version
of the annual foreign aid
authorization bilL With
bipartisan approval and the
support
of
the
administration, the amendment
won
uncontest
passage when the House
passed the aid bill last week.
In the Senate, where
Hubert H. Humphrey, DMinn., became a cosponsor of
the plan earlier in the year,
aides said prospects for
approval of the program
were good. The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, working from the
House-approved aid bill
which Includes the FindleyHumphrey
plan,
was
scheduled to begin voting on
its version of the aid blll
Wednesday, and a Humphrey
aide said no opposition to the
''Famine trevention '' section
has surfaced.

American League
East
Bos ton
Balli more
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit

Da~e

week.

Helen He!P
Us••• By Helen Bottel

•'

Approval of the program
"is the fint step In the.
revolution for sufficiency of'
food ·... The" American·
people could not make a
greater contribution to world
peace and prosperity,",
Findley said.

programs In developing
countries by supporting In·
ternational
agricultural
research
centers, and
' building Institutions which
worlc: directly with small
farmers in developing
countries.

· Hfamtne prevention" plan
which has drawn lavish
praise
from
leading
university spokesmen Is
moving rapidly to~ard
congressional approval this

pm

Ohio games

"

o

Buffalo

w.
5

M iami
NY Jets
New England

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDI"I'OR
WASHINGTON UPI - A

This

ed

. United Pnll 'lnternational . Westminster 6 ·Muskin.gum 0
Ohio St. 21 Mich. St . D
Otterbein 26 ManchesterO
Bell St . 38 Tot . 28
DePauw 28 Wooster 8
Bowling ' Green · 23 Brigham Mt. Union 55 Geneva 7 Ohio
Young 21
Otllo Wesleyan 21
Ohio Unlv. 6 Central Mich. 6 Northern 8
tie
Kenyon 24 Sethanv 12
~ent
St.
31
Northeast Cantre 28 Oberlin 0
Loullll"l 29
•
:·
Ashland 3.4 Ferris St . 10
Mleml 50 Marshall 0
Bluffton 15 Taylor 8
Akron 27 Western Mich . 21 Thle~ 35 -Western ReS'erve 21
Cln. 19 RIChmond 6
Yo!Jngstown St . 10 Central St.
.
.Eeatern Ky. lO Dayton 24
Wittenberg
19
Baldwin · Albion 10 Defiance 3

Major Lngue Sfi1ndln9~
By United Pres! lnterniltional

T

East

yards and scored four touchdowns.
Ninth-ranked Penn State,
which squeaked by Temple
last week, bounced back In
solid fashion, thumping
Stanford 34-14. Rich Mauti
scored two TDs and Chris
Bahr kicked field goals of 39
week~
and 3;1 yards.
No. 6 Auburn~ whose hopes
had to be enlivened after
Alabama was thrashed by
Missouri last Monday, sufUnited Press International
fered a disheartening blow
Penn St at Oh io Sf
when It was upset 31-20 by Miami
at Mich . St
unranked and unheralded Ball St at Ohio Unlv
So MISSissippi at .Bowling
Memphis State. Kippy Brown Green
threw for two TDs to present V1rgin ia Tech ' al Kent St .
Tol at Villanova
former
Alabama
aide Memphis
St. at Cinn
Richard WliUJtmson his first Akron at Dayton
win as a college head coach. Ashland at C W . Post
Youngstown St at Tenn Tech .
Elsewhere Saturday, Edinboro St at Baldwin UCLA, headed by John Wallace n
Heidelberg at Ohio Northern
Sciarra's three TDs, ripped Marietta at Caoital
Iowa State 37·21, No. 10 Texas Slippery Roc k at Musklngum
n·
A&amp;M blanked Mississippi 7~, Otterbein at Kenyon
No. 11 Texas routed Colorado Wooster at Mt Union
Den 1son at Juniata
State 41Ml, Miami of Ohio DePauw at Oh io Wesleyan
extended the nation's longest Wittenberg at Delaware
Hanover at Bluffton n
unbeaten string to 24 games Case
-Western Reserve at
with a 50·0 drubblng of Allegheny
Central St. at Lincoln Mo . n
Marshall, Tennessee upset Adrian at Defiance n
14th ranked Maryland 26-8, Anderson at Findlay n
ton at Tavlor
No. 15 Florida blasted SMU Wilming
Bethany at John Carroll
40-14, Wake Forest stunned Hiram al Alma
17th ranked North Carollna
State 3().22, No. 18 (tie)
Colorado trimmed California
Major Lngue Resutts
34-27, Rice ripped No. 18 (tie) '
By United Press International
Houston 24-7, South Carollna
National League
020 001 OOQ-3 7 1
ambushed Georgia Tech 23- Montreal
Pittsburgh
000 101 02)( - 4 9 0
17, Army ran over Holy Cross
Blair,
Fryman
(8)
and
44-7,
Navy
shellacked Carter , Demery, Tekulve (7 ),
(8), Giusti (9) and
Virginia 42-14, Tulane Hernandez
Sanguillen. WP -Hernandez {7 downed OeiiiSOn 17-13 and 2) LP -Fryman (8 -11) . HR -Zisk
Northwestern
surprised (19th I
Purdue 31-25.
New York
000 000 020--2 7 2

Wddlife

Ohio College results

' Exhibition st11ndings
Final NFL
By United Press International
American Conterence

x-includes Coltege All-Star reMonlreal (Roger s 10 -11 J al
sult
New York. (Koosman 12 13 },
Saturday's Results
8 . 05 p m .
Houston 24 Chicago 13
Philadelph ia (Christenson 10Miami 31 NY Giants 13
5) at St Lou is ( Rasmussen 4
Detroit 27 Cleveland 24
A}. 6 30 p .m .
Dallas 17 Plllsburgh 16
San Diego (F olkers 6-9) at
Atlanta 17 Philadelphia u
Los Angeles. ( Hooton 16-9),
Cincinnati 20 New Orleans 0
10· 30 p m
San Francisco 24 Green Bay 3
A llanta (Easterly 1-8 ) al San
Minnesota 14 san Diego 14 . ot
Francisco (Halicki 9-13). 1LOS
Sunday's Results
pm
Denver 21 Sf Louis 17
Tuesday's Games
NY Jets vs. New England. Pittsburgh at Chicago
cancelled , strike
Montreal at New York. n
Houston at Ci ncmnali, n
San Diego at Los Angeles , n
Atlanta al San Francisco. n
Philadelphia at St Louis, n

po=. Irish, ranked No. 8,
United Press lnlernollonal
East
open with a no-name offense.
Army 44 Holy Cross 7
Rick Slager, who logged only
•
Boston u. 31 Maine 21
18 minutes playing time at Sllrll'lO'V IS
Delaware St. 29 Wm . Pat --,;
terson 0
quarterback last year, will
E. Stroudsburg 7 Slippery
Rock Q
direct an attack that has lost
Ithaca 30 St. Lawrence 6
eight starters from the team
UCt
Kenyon 24 Bethany 12
Which upset Alabama ln the
Lehigh 27 Millersville 18
·
New Hampshire , 24 West
Orange_Bowl on New Year's
COLUMBUS (UPI) _ A
Chester o
day
Penn St. 34 Stanford 14
'
survey to determine how the
Syracuse 24 Villanova 17
During the weekend, Ok· public uses state wildlife
Waynesburg St. 19 Frostburg
7
•
lahoma, Ohio State, Southern areas 18
being conducted
St
West Virginia 50 Temple 7
Ca lif orn Ia, Ml c hi gan an d jointly by the Ohio State
West va st 24 w. va . Tech o
Pem State all emerged easy Uru'versity and the DepartSouth
Abilene Christian 34 Troy
wlnnera. That can only mean ment of Natural Resources'
State 7
g~r:,i~asr~ l&amp; ~~r~ey
bad news to the upstarts who Division of WUdlife, which
had hoped to climb back to will also comblnefor a future
Florida 40 SMU 14
~sperlty
d 1
Oh' '
Grambling 40 Morgan St . 7
·
.
stu Y o measure
to s
Kentucky 27 Virginia Tech s
OhiO State and Michigan woodcock population.
Memphis St. 31 Auburn 20
took care of two Big Ten
"The wildlife area survey
Navy 42 Vlrlgnla 14
dreamers- Michigan State
. . .
s Carolina 23 GeorgIa Tech
.
Will help the .diVISIOn
17
and WJsconsin- by beating determine the Various
Tennessee 26 Maryland 8 The
• &lt; Ciladel 21 Presbyterian 0
them on their own_ h.em.'• .!! tecreational uses of tl!e'areaS-"'
Tulllne 17 Clemson 13
turfs.
,._,.,.,,_
order to develop•l.rograms
Wake Forest 30 N.C. state 22
Third ranked Ohio 'State to
maintain
quality
vanderbllt,J{d;;:,•tanooua 7
opened Coach Woody Hayes' recreation" division Otief
Akron 27 W.Michlgan 21
25th
b dr bbl
'
Carleton 23 Cornell 20
. season Y
u
ng Dale Haney said Saturday.
DePauw 28 wooster Ohio 8
Michigan State 21~ at East
During a one-year perind
E . Michigan 30 Indiana St . 7
Lansing. 'lbe win avenged questiorutlres are belng put
:~~~~~s.'?o 1 ~":~n~;oca 14
last year's 16-14 loas which on car windshields at 43
Kansas st. 17 TulSa )6
had bolltered Michigan -"''d llf
Michigan 23 Wlsconson 6
areas.,
Miami Ohio 50 Marshall 0
State' s dream of ta king the wuFall ewoodcock
hunters will Nebraska 10 LSU 7
Did Ten Utle this time Pete
be -'-ed the
d
of
North Dakota 34 Montano St .
....,
·
a...
sex an age
to
~ acored on TD nms of migratory and resident birds. Nor,th Texas 7 Droke 3
siUndnlne va•cls and Arcliie Th
will also be 8Sked to Ohio
Northwestern 31 Purdue 25
'---~ ..ey
St. 21 Michigan St. 0
Grlflln gained over 100 yarda ·submit a wing from each Washington St . 18 Kansas 14
fot tile 22nd successive time woodcock taken.
Arkansas 53~"\:',~"t!rce o

cond

Pro
·Famine ·prevention· scheme
standings BASEBALL
g~ins support in Congress

0" ...,, ....._. ...............,,~y ... ..., ...... .,

~503

Co

MIDDLEP()RT, OHIO

lfJ CQpyr ighl 11115 8u•~el' Ct&gt;el S,.tlems , In!;,

UOP 31 UC Davis 13

.-.
,.,
'.

•

't:

:·;

Officers were elected and
coinmittee
chairpersons
were appointed at the
Thursday night meeUng of
the Rock Sprlngs Grange at
the hall.
Elected
were
Fred
GOeglwin, master; William
G"iueser, overseer; Helen
!i1dford, lecturer; Amos
r:ionard, steward; James
Clinkle, assistant steward;
ll)luna Grueser, chaplain;
l;iicille Leifheit, treasurer;
l!tancea Goegleln, !ecretary;
Homer Radford, gate keeper;
Ethel Grueser, Ceres; Helen
BladLiton, Pomona; Louise
Radford, Flora;
Betty .
Cont,le, lady
assistant
ltftard, and AmOII Leonard,
exeutive committee.
ApPointed • were · Elma
Ltl'gcks, pianists; Lottie
U!o~d, chairwoman of
&amp;uen'a activities; Lucille
Leifheit, youth cbaltwoman;
Mu .
Conkle, • juvenlle
cllalrwoman; WilHam
Rl JliJtd, Jegillative agent.
M8egbig time waa changed
• 1Ai.?:30 p.m. Reported ill was

Mrs.

Eleanor Enevoldsen.
Mrs. Lottie Leonard thanked
all th011e who helped with
serving during the year. A
thank-you note was read from
Lynn and Greg Bailey for a
wedding gift.

and new offlel!n_were_!!lected_ meeting of the Junior
, American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39 at
the Pomeroy hall.
The unit "adopted " Bill
Rovnak, a veteran at the
Arcadia Nursing Home,
Coolville and Sherrie Mar·
shall, a cystic fibrosis child, .
for
r e me in b r a n c e s
MONDAY
throQghout the year. They
RACINE PTO at Racine also made a,rrangements to
Elementary School 7:30p.m . fill Irick and treat bags for
with a bleenteMlal program
the boys in Harding Cottage
to be presented. Parents and at the Xenia Soldiers and
teachen to be introduced.
Sailors' Orphans Home .
LETART FAU.S PTA first
Donations were made to the
meeting of year, 7:30p.m. at Lonnie LeMaster hospital
school with teachers night to
fund and to muscular
be held.
dis trophy . It was reported
MEIGs.GALLIA OCSEA, 8 that Charlotte and Robln
p.m . at the. Cheahire Masonic Lehew, members who reside
Building .
In Columbus had staged a
MIDDLEPORT Business muscular dlstrophy carnival
and Professional Women'A contributing $17.63 . to the
Club, 7: 30 p.m. at the WTVN campaign . A $10
Columbia Gas Co. office. contribution was made to the
Representative of 648 Mental Meigs Band Boosters.
Health Board to speak on
Elected for the 1975-76 year
upcoming levy. Program wlll
feature discussion on employment problems.

Peggy Girolaml,
vice.
president; Denise Marshall,
secretary;
Lori Wood,
treasUrer; Rhonda Reuter.
chaplain; and Tracey Jef·
fers, sergeant-at...rms. Installation by Pam Powers,
eighth district president, wlll
take place Sept. 23 with the
juniors from Racine and the
junior president of FeeneyBennett Post 128 to be lnvi'ted.
Mrs . Veda Davis, junior
advisor, extended thanks for
cards and flowers during her
illness. She displayed books
and papers provided by
Debbie, Charlotte and Robin
Lehew about the Freedom
Train.
Cheryl Lehew gave a
prayer to open the meeting,
and the pledge to the flag and
the preamble were given in
unison.
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Robert
Couch and Mrs. Grace Pratt
served pizza and soft drinks.

SocI.aI

calendar

MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
p .m . at the school. Introduction of· teachers and
other school personnel In·
eluding the Meigs Local
superintendent and assistant
superintendent and the
principal of the Meigs Junior
High School. Executive
committee will serve refresh·
ments.
CHESTER PTA, 7:30p.m.
at the elementary school with
"get acquainted" night for
new parents and teschers to
be observed.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30p. m . at the home of Mrs.
Charles McDaniel,
270
Walnut St., Middleport.
TUESDAY
SALISBURY PTA, 7 :30
p.m . Program by John Lisle.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30p.m. Bring a friend.

fVerrys .hold reunion\ Nuptial vows read
Descendants of Jacob and
Catherine Werry met at the
home of James and Karen
Werry and sons Jimmy,
Randy and Ricky, of Morning
Star for a reunion Agu. 31.
Attending were Mrs.
Charles ( Lucetria) Werry,
Herman Werry, Mrs. Eleanor
Werry, Ralph Werry, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Werry, Debbie
and! Tammy, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Werry, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Smith, Don
and Mike _and Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Arnold, Pomeroy
RD .
Mr. and Mrs . John Werry,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Werry,
Hemlock Grove ; Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Werry, Don and
Gregg, Mrs. Margaret Werry
Phelps and Mary Upthegrove, Dayton; Mr. and
Mrs .
Harold
Werry,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Walter Werry, Paula, Denise
and Glen Werry, Mason, W.
Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Werry,
Kevin· and Eric, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Philip Werry, Ray,
Eddie and Janet, Chester ;
Mr. _I!!Jd Mrs. Mlk~ Werry and

Brandon, Belpre; Mrs. Steve
Price and Stephanie, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Werry, Middleport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E .
Holter and Kevin , Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Holter and Jamy,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Card and
Aaron Bradley, Dan Earich,
Cambridge; David and Jill
Earich, Westerville; Carol
Burdette, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Werry. Gallipolis, were
camplnggueslsof the Werrys
on the reunion weekend .
Other weekend guests ineluded Mrs. Lucetrica Werry,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Werry, Dan and Gregg, and
Mary Upthegrove, Dayton .
Visiting on Saturday
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Michael L. Roach and Misty,
- Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Circle, Carmel; Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Tuttle and
John, Eagle Ridge, In addition to many of those who
attended the Sunday reunion.
The 1976 reunion will be at
the home of Mr . and Mrs.
Philip Werry on Sunday of
Labor Day weekend.

REVIVAL SERVICES, 7:30
each evening through Sunday
at
Snowville
United
Methodist Church, SR 681,
five miles west of SR 33 with
the Rev. Howard Mayne,
pastor, in charge. Special
singing. Everyone welcome.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,
Trinity ChW'ch, 7:30 p-. m.
Mrs. Pearl Mora, program .
leader.
'XI GAMMA MU Sorority
I&gt;J roLL Y t;KA MER
meeting and progressive'
dinner, 6:30p.m. Appetizers
prepared by Debbie Finlaw'
wUI be served at the home of
Richard Finlaw, 512 E. Main
St., Pomeroy. Maln course
dinner at home of Annie ·
almost splll proof.
Polly's Problem
Chapman . Meeting and
I find It most useful to keep
DEAR
POLLY
My
dessert at home of _Jane
husband has a pair of real an old shower cap in the
Bourne.
nice corfam shoes that have a kitchen to wear (especially
AUXILIARY of Veterans build-up of polish that nothing just after I have had my hair
Memorial Hospital will meet · will remove. We were using done) whenever I cook or fry
at the hospital at 7 p.m. From liquid white but along the way onions or anything with a
the hospital they will go to the changed to a cream that has heavy odor. Such odors cling
home of Dr. R. Pickens at hardened and I have spent to clothes and hair. Also this
hours trying to chip it off with cap comes In handy when a
7:30p.m.
the tip of a nail file. I also sudden shower comes up and
CHESTER Council 323,
tried leavlng a damp cloth on I have to run out to the yard
DaQghters of America, 8 p.m .
them for hours but that did and bring in clothes or toys in
at the hall. Potluck refresh- not help. These shoes are so a hurry. I am always amazed
menls. Quarterly birthdays comfortable, show·litUe wear at the new ideas the readers
will be observed.
after almost two years and have.- HAPPY.
Group ll, Middleport First required almost no "breaking
DEAR POLLY - Golf balls
United Presbyterian Church, in" so .he hates to part with can be neatly and easily
7:30p.m. at the church with them. Is there some stored in an egg carton.
Mrs. Carl Horky, hostess; relatively simple answer to
Cut your brown paper
Mrs.
Helen
Shuler, this problem? - M.G.B .
grocery hag into convenient
devotions; Mrs. Joseph
DEAR M.G.B. - There are sizes to have on hand for
Bailey, program; a review of many flnlsbes on such shoeS draining bacon and other
a book by Marjorie Holmes. so one would always do well fried foods. This is neat and
Thank offering to be taken. to ask at the time of purchase economical and the brown
OIDO ETA PID CHAP- as to tbe care required. Some paper is quite absorbent. TER, Beta Sigma Phi only need to have the dirt VIRGINIA
Sorority, 7:30p.m., Columbus wiped off and require no
DEAR POLLY - I wad up
and Southern Ohio Electric polish. I received conflicting a soft plastic bag that comes
Co. Program, "What Women opinions from three sboe from the cleaner and use It as
are Heir To" by Sandy Korn . repair shops so anythlng,_you a dust rag on days when I am
Hostesses, Sandi Sargent and try Is at your own risk since not uslng furniture polish . I
Kathy Cumings. .
even those wbo care for sboes think this is particularly good
· FRIENDLY CIRCLE, prolessloually do not agree. for anyone allergic to house
Trinity Church, : 7:30 p.m. One said the thick coat of dust as the static keeps the
Mrs. Pearl Mora will have polish might he dissolved dust from Dying around.
the program.
with paint tlllnner or cleaning MRS. L.G.
Duld applled with a white
HERE ONE DAY
cloth. rest since this may
Howard Pill!l!lll, ·!J'oronto,
remove the color of tile finish Ohio visiied one day last
on lbe shoes;
week with his daQghter, Mrs.
I was also advised that any Bobby Roush, Middleport.
such removen wUI.Jeave the
later meetlng.
·shoes stlclfy 'and perluaps In
FAMILY ENTERTAINS
Highlights of the Hershey, even WOfl!e conditions, If
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice
Pa. mideastern conference possible. ·i'bere are special and their son, Billy, hosted a
were given by Venma Rue. pollsbei and a transparent "block" picnic recently at
Ann Rupe gave a short paste
for such shoes but theq- Cherry Ridge farm .
resume of her year In Africa, I think you sboald take yours Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
. Butcher
'
and a hobo party was an- to a shoe repair man so he Jun
and son Jeff,
nounced for September.
could see them. - POLLY Mr. and Mrs. R~ll Carson
June
Van
Vranken
DEAR POLLY - Today, and sons Steven and Roger,
presented a program on and not for the first time, I Mr. and Mrs . Larry Baker
"Heritage Heartbeat" with knocked over a full bottle of and sons Shawn and Matthe officers, Norma Ams- liquid Door wax so you can thew, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam
bary, June Watton; Rose wei! ~lne that my Pet Kennedy ,
Mrs.
Alice
Sisson and Margaret Follrod Peev~ is with those tall tippy Robeson, Mr~. LucUle Schserving refreshments.
bottles of wwt, detergents, wartz, Chester Morris, Mr .
The next meellng will be etc. It ·seems such things and Mrs. William Brlckles,
hosted 'by Nellie Brown and could be put in low squat Mr. and Mrs. Ron Hanning,
Ruby Baer.
containers that are at least and Bruce Decker.

Polly's Pointers
Conflicting opinions
on shoe care

Two_contributions made
Contributions of t50 each
were made to . the Meigs
County Senior _, Citizens
Program and the Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Hlstorlcai
Society · by 1
PreCeptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Corority
meeUng Thursday night at
the hone of Mrs. Margaret
Follrod.
The chapter decided to
lnvlte Maxine PliDilDler of
the Mental Health Board to
speak at the riext meeUng.
Siwon Bailey of the Cancer
Society will be asked to talk
on the monthly cllnica at a

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ASSOCIATED DRUGGISTS

SAVINGS
FOR FALL

MAALOX

12 oz.
SIZE

REG. 11.59

ANACIN

$329

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\

300's
REG.
1
4.39

OORICIDIN
25's
REG.
'1.45

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
6.5

oz.

REG.
1
1.65

ALKA-SELTZER
72's
REG. ~
'2.39

l "ll ~fiC IIIT

.... LQIIIC

• • •• LO~I ·Q

h i l l II

179

DiLORASEPTIC
6 oz. Reg. $1.71

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

.•'·

MIDDLEPORT
.J.'

GENERA L
REVENUE

ACTUAL USE REPORT

SHAA I N G

THf GOv l Rr'i Mf~!

RACINE VILLAGE

M• ••c•• ·odGo""'' """""" S~ I MJ

Sl,ll 9

~--r~~~--1 ~~~~'~"·~·~
·"~'"~"'~
"·-~~~----~

~~~E~~==3E~~=~ dull'~'""""'~r ..,m

2

lui) I l9l41N&lt;J- Joc•lO

~~ ~CCJ U '•' t-.:1

191~

36 2 OSl DOl

RACINE VILLAGE
VILLAGE CLERK

691

RACINE , OHIO
4577 1j

4577 1

Jd.. 1111.11.11 .. r1. Jl.. i!lt .!.ll ...,u, ... u. 11/11.,1

6

!oum~IL•·~•

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I l&gt;IJI f und&gt; llo.&gt;l 1&gt;blo

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Minerslvlle, and Zetah
McCain and Marilyn Coulson,
CoolvUle.
The new Mr. and Mrs .
Walker are residing in
Pomeroy following a brief
wedding trip In Kentucky.

ma•

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Kt:EUSVILLE - On May
31, Karen Rae Hwnphrey,
daQghter of Mr . and Mrs . C.
Ed Hwnphrey , Reedsville,
became the bride of Gary
Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Walker, Racine.
The wedding took place in
the garden at the home of
Mrs. C. Earle Humphrey,
grandmother of the bride,
before an altar created with
log pillars and a kneeling
bench. Two large baskets of
painted daisies were used on
the pillars and single white
daisies were placed at the
front of the altar.
Mrs. Jean Frydman of
Colwnbus was pianist for the
wedding which was performed by the Rev. Freeland
Norris, Racine. Mrs . Mary
Shoults,
Ra c ine,
Ann
registered the guests.
The bride, adorned in a
handmade ecru gown of
unblea ched embroidered
muslin and lace, was
escorted to the altar by her
father. Her only jewelry was
a star sapphire necklace, a
gift of the groom . She carried
a bouquet of white daisies.
Miss Robin Humphrey,
Reedsville, sister of the
bride, served as maid of
honor. She wore a blue
flowered polyester gown with
an ecru wide-brimmed
picture hat. Attendants were
Vicki Carr, Alfred ; Karen
Anne Stone, Cleveland,
cousin of the bride; and Patti
Harr, Parkersburg , W. Va.
The attendants wore pink
flowered gowns styled the
same as that of the maid of
honor.
Miss
Joy
Co ul so n,
Coolville, cousin of the bride,
was flower girl. She wore a
gown identical to that of the
maid of honor . She wore a
band of blue· daisies in her
hair and carried a basket of
white daisy petal~.
Roger Shoults , Racine,
brother-in-law of the groom,
served as best man. The
ushers were David Hensler,
Racine ; Mark Davis, Middleport, and Tom Ball,
Pomeroy.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the
garden. The bride's table was
centered
with
an
arrangement of painted
daisies. The four-tier wedding cak~was decorated with
pale plnk and blue flowers .
Assisting at the reception
were Anita Buckley, Katrina
Batey and Jenny Machiar,
Chester ;
Linda
King,

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' -Tbe Dallv Sentinel, Mlddle_p ort·Pomeroy, 0 .. 1\llnnA•v, Sept. 15, 1975,

Nicklaus World Open champ
Nicklaus started the day at
2 under par, five strokes
behind Tom Weiskopf. But as
the leaders continued to
suffer bogeys In the tricky
wind, Nicklaus played a
"good thinking round"
without a bogey and chalked
up birdies at the fourth and
isth holes for a 69.
Casper dropped a couple of
strokes to one under early
Sunday but moved back to
four under at the 15th and
sald he thought he would
wrap up the victory with a
birdie at the par 5, 16th.
"I felt after I hit my second
shot at 16 that I was going to
win the tournament," said
Casper.
But his second shot went In
the sandtrap and be had to
settle for a par and finished
with a pair of pars to tie
Nicklaus.
Casper's drive on the par-4
first hole in the playoff went

PINEHURST, N. C. (UPI)
- Jacll · Nicklaus let the
leaders faher In the wind
while he picked up a playoff
victory Sunday In the World
Open golf tournament.
"When you get PinehW'st
with wind and they put the
pihsln the corners, you've got
to think," sald Nicklaus, who
sank a short par putt on the
first sudden-death hole to
defeat BUly Casper. "That's
what's so great about the

tournament.''
All week Nicklaus bad
talked about the famed
Pinehurst No. 2 coW'se being
one of his favorite COW'ses
because it's where be won the
1959 NortbSouth amateur at
age 19.
" I won here as an amateur
and I wanted to put my name
In the books as a pro, too," he
sald after picking up the
$40,000 first prize. "You
always like to win on' a great

course."

In the roQgh and he missed
the green. He chipped about
seven feet short and missed,
giving Nicklaus his lith
playoff victory In 18 trtes.
Nicklaus sald 1975 has been
"the best year of golf I've
played. But whether Its the
best year record-wise, that's
questionable."
He has five victories and 13
top-10 finishes in 15 tour·
naments, with winnings of
$294,2li3 for a good lead
enroute to the 1975 money
title.
Weiskopf soared to a 75
Sunday and finished alone ln
third place at 281. He put his
drive In the woods on the final
hole and bogeyed, knocking
him out of the playoff.
Second-round leader Pat
Fitzsimons, winner of the Los
Angeles Open , also shot a 75
Sunday and finished fourth at
282, one stroke ahead of Ed
Sneed.

/

Irish open season tonight
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sporta Writer
The script is the same
every year.
Sprlng practice starts .. .
college coaches everywhere
clamor about competing with
the Oklahomas, Southern
CaUforniasandOhio States ...
and then comes that first
unfortunate full college
weekend when sweet dreams
tum lnto harsh realities.
While many of those teams
harboring great expectations
were shot down by college
football's pereruUal powerhouses Saturday, Boston College hopes to move back Into
national prominence on
television tonight by tackling
an emotionally charged
Notre Dame squad, playlng
Its first game under new
coach Dan Devine.
The Fighting Irish have
won their last 11 openers and
are 7'n-point favorites, but
Devlne Isn't taking "the
Eagles lightly.
"Our coaching staff and
players are alert to the fact
that
College is a team
with experience, talent and
motivation," said Devlne .
"And I can tell you all of us
have a healthy respect for
Joe Yuklca 's team."
And with good reason.
The Eagles, whose dream
Is to challenge Penn State for
supremacy ln the East, have
not appeared In a bowl game
since 1942 but they won their
final six games last year and
sport a weJfbiiilincicfatiack.
Two 1teys to that dream are
quarterbacll Mike Kruczek,
who completed an NCAA
record 68 percent of his
passes last fall, and fullback
Keith Barnette, who rushed
for 1,097 yarda and led the
nation In scoring with 134

BOiltoo

for the Buckeyes.
Wisconsin's dreams were
spurred by Billy Marek, who
led the Big Ten ln rushing last
year. But when Michigan
held Marek to just 58 yards,
all Badger hopes went by the
wayside. The fifth ranked
Wolverines
trounced
Wisconsin 23-6 as Gordon Bell
plied up 210 yards and a
touchdown.
The Big Eight figured to be
the usual two-team race with
Oklahoma and Nebraska
fighting for the crown. But
judging from each team's
opener, the race is aU but
over.
Oklahoma, the nation's top
ranked team, got a sterllng
perfonnance from Its second
and third string, particularly
Horace Ivory and Jim Cuibreath, who each scored two
TDs and comblned for 221
yards ln a 62-7 rout of Oregon
State.
No. 7 Nebraska, althoQgh
playing at home, had a
surprisingly tough time with
Louisiana State, shadlng the
Tigers 1().7. The Cornhuskers,
favored by 15 points, needed a
37-yard field goal by Mike
Coyle and a five-yard TD
pass from Terry Lock to Bob
Thomas to gain the victory.
Second-ranked
Southern
CaUfornla gave notice to
Pacific Eight dreamers who
figured things might be
easier this time around now
that Anthony Davis has
graduated. The defending
n a tl on a I
cham pi o n s
steamrollered Duke 35-7
Friday night and In the
process found the perfect
replacement for DavisRicky Bell, a Junior who
rushed for a school record 256

Wallace 0
Capital 17 Hldelberg

7
o•nlson 14 Marietta 6

' Findlay 37 Earlham o
Hlrom 10 John corroll

7

L. T .. Pet .

,Na,t;on:~.~eaguo
0 833
0 800
w.. L. Pet. GS
0 .600 Piltsburgh
84 63 .57 1
0 500 Ph i ladelphia 79 69 .534 s lJ~
0 333 St Louis
77 71 .520
1v,
75 74 .503 10
New York
L. . T . . Pel Chicago
71 78 .m
14
3 0 .571 Montreal
65
83
.439
19'"
3 0 .500
West
4 0 429
w.. L.. Pet. GB

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3
4

'3

3
2
Central

Baltimore

W,
4
3
3

Cinci nnati
Houston

x -P•ffsburgh
Cleveland

2

0 333

4

WPd

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W . . L. T. Pet .
5
1 0 .833
3 3 0 500

Oak.lan&lt;;l
Kansas"tity
Denver

.soo·

3

3

0

f'

4

1 250

San Otego

National Conference
East
W. , L. T. Pet.
NY Giants
4 2 0 .667
Philadelph ia
3 3 0 .500
3 3 0 .500
St Louis
4 3 0 571
Washing ton
2 4 0 . 333
Dallas
Central
W . . L. . T . . Pet .
2 3 1 417
M innesota
2 4 0333
Chicago
2 4 0 .333
Green Bay
Detroit
2 '0333
West
W •. L . - T . . Pet .

Los Angeles

5

1

0 .833

Atlanta
San Francisco
New Orl eans

3
3
2

3
3
4

0 .SOO
0 .500
0 333

• - Cin cinnati
98 52 .653
Los Angeles
81 69 .540 17
San Francisco 12 78 .480 26
Sa n Diego
68 81 .456 29112
Atlanta
65 85 .433 34
Houston
59 91 393 39
• -clinched divtsion title
Saturday's Results
Chicago 4 Philadelphia 1
San Francisco 9 Cincinnati 2
New York 6 St. Louis 2
Montreal 5 Pittsburgh 2
Los Angeles 6 Atlan ta o
Sunday's Results
Houston 4 San Diego 2
Sl . Louis 6 New York 1
Los Angeles 3 A tl anta 2
Pittsburgh A Montreal 3
Philadelphia 13 Ch1cago 7
San Fran A C1nc1nnat i 2, l si
Cin 8 San Frillnclsco 3. 2nd
Monday ' s Games
(All T1mes eon
Pilfsburgh (Reuss 16-11 and
Rooker 12-9) at Chicago ( Bon ham 13 lJ and Prall 0 1). 2, 1

The plan, drafted early In
the year by Rep. Paul Fin·
dley, R-ID., calls for a new
system of federal aid to land
grant universities. The
universities, in tum, would
use the money to set up expanded and continuing
programs of aid In boosting
food production through
educational lnstl tutlons in
hungry naUons alroad.

Northwestern St . 21 Fort
Hav.s 20
Oklahoma 62 Oregon 7
Oklahoma St. 34 Wichita St . 0
RIce 2.4 Houston 1
TeMas A&amp;M 7 Mississippi o
TeM.as 46 Colorado St . 0
Texas Tech 31 Florid' St. :zo
Ari'zona St : rs•~tashlngton 12
Bowling Green 23 Brigham
young 21
•
Colorado 3.4 California 27
ld 111 h 0 st 1~ w om tnq ~
· ·
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•
Montana Sl,• Soutn Dak.ota 17
N. A~ I zona 3&lt;4 UC Riverside 30
San Diego St. 35 Oregon St . 0
San .Jose Sf. 13 Santa Clara 0
So . M iss. 14 Weber State 10
Texas A&amp; I 43 Hawaii 9

UCLA 37 Iowa State 21
Utah St . 13 Uloh 7

77

72 .517

71 74
63 87

11
490 IS
420 2S if~

55 9' 369 33

West
W.

L. . Pet . GB

Oakland
90 sa 608
Kansas Cily
83 65 .561
1
Te xas
73 76 490 17 11~
Chi cago
69 77 473 20
Minnesota
68 77 .469 10 '1~
California
67 82 450 23 1f1
. Saturday's Results
Oakland 8 Minnesota 5
Milwaukee 9 Boston 6, 1st
Boston 6 Milwaukee 3, 2nd
Cleveland 7 New York 1, 1st
New York 4 Cleveland 3, 2nd
Texas 8 Chicago 7. 10 jnn
Balli more 8 Detroil 0
Ca l 1fornia 6 Kansas City 2
5unday'i Ruults
Baltimore 9 Detroit 3
Kansas C1ty 10 California 4
Minnesota 10 Oakland 8
Boston 8 Milwaukee 6
New York 6 Cleveland 2
Texas 9 Chicago 8, 13 lnn
Monday's Games
(All Times EDT)
Oakland (Blue 19-11) at Texas
(Perry 16-16) , 9 p.m
Chicago &lt;Osteen 7-14) at
Kansas City (Splittorff 8-8 },
8 30 p .m .
California (Pactwa 0-01 ar
Minnesota CBiyleven 14 -8 ), 9
p.m .
Milwaukee (Colborn 10 · 10) at
Boston (Moret 13-3), 7: 30p .m .
Tuesdav's Games
Oakland at Texas , n
Chicago at Kansas City , ri
California al Minnesota . n
Baltimore at Boston, n
New York at Milwaukee , n
Cleveland at Detr oit . n

Linescores

College
gn"d scores

W . . L. . Pet . GB
88 61 .591
84 65 564 A

51. Louis
102 000 12x- 6 10 0
Seaver, f-\811 (3), Stone (6),
Sanders (8) and Grote ; Dennv,
Garman (8) and Simmons. WP Oenny (10 -SL LP -Seaver {21 -9).

,- -

(1st game)
Cincinnati
000 011 OOD----2 10 1
San Franclsc 010 001 20X- 4 9 0
Nolan , McEnaney (8) and
Plummer ; Dressier . Lavelle
(7), Heaverlo (7) and Rader .
WP -Heaverlo (3-1). LP -Nolan
(13 9). HRs -Rader {5th), Cn t1veros (2nd) .
(2nd game)
Cincinnati
300 000 OSD--8 12 0
San Franclsc 020 000 001- 3 7 0
Darcy. Easlwick (9) and
Werner; Minton. Lavelle (8),
Moffitt (9) and Rader. WP ·
Darcy (10-5). LP -Minton (0 1).
H R Crowle-v &lt;lstl .

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Dear Helen:
'
•• I've been trying to formulate a

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· I put yoiD' questkm to one lclmtllt and one melelll'ologlst,
both of wbom looked wise, and rea ved comments. Then I
opened our local newepaper (The Sacrammto BEE) and
P."Owd again that coincidences leek me out. The cartoon,
':9AUCUS," by "Hugo," llhowed an avid uaer of aeroc10ls,
mourning aa she llpribed, "Thla full about spray cans
destroying tile atmAiphet e Ia rldlculowi! If we should ever run
out of natural orme, I'm !Aft It will be produced artlfldally
and marketed ••• IN SPRAY CANS!"
_ My only obaervatiGn: Wouldn't pumplng replenlalunent
ozone Into the sky be 10111ewbat like cooling the ocean with ice
cubes?- Tremendous Job!- H.

A

Dear Helen:

SljOCKED

•

near Shocked,
What's Indecent about Items almollt every woman uses for
over 30 years of bet Ufe? In a day when - flnally -we need no
!Qoger whisper about body functions, menstruation, sex and aU
U1QSe normal thing~, why shouldn't personal hygiene
p.:oduclll be advertl8ed on TV? If you're shocked by mention of
a panitary pad, or even a male contraceptive- then you're too
eallily shocked, say I! - H.

Dear Helen:
, • I really had to do some high gear saleswomanship to get
lOY husband, Dlrk,eold on the idea of havlng a baby. But now
!fl!ll she's 2 years old and the apple of Daddy's eye, he wants
another child. In fact, he's really nagging me. Says HE should
Wlil this one, as be 1081 the first argument.
~~ · Dirk doesn't know tbe work Involved. He's away all day
lii\g, then comes home to an angel. I'm here when she shar~na her horns on me!
, . . He says two children are just right. I ssy one's enoQgh!
~of the expense, among other things. I love little Beverly,

.

heritage house
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FOR THE ,.
PROTECTION !.
YOU NEED-.·

but-

Play it safe anct-oare

)

It may be time to
have your preaent
policy updated.

Let's Faile Soon

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samsonite

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Portable Furniture

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1!89.·
• Mrs.
LoUise

(5th), Tenace (26th), washing ton ~lOth l

Houston
100 010 020--4 10 0
San Diego
000 000 002-2 9 1
Richard, Niekro (9) and
Jutze ; Jones, Frisella (8) and
' Kendell . WP -Richard (11 -9)
LP -Jones &lt;19 -10) .

==================

Greta Simpson, Mrs.
Stewart and Mrs.
letha Morris were named to
the. nominating committee
. $Clli!duled to report at the
~9Y. 13 meeting at the Webb

·.
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American League
Cleveland
000 200 D00--2 7 1
New York
003 000 30x-6 10 1
Waits, Buskey (7) and AShby ; :
Hunter, Martinez
(8)
and
Munson . WP -Hunter (22-13) . ,
LP · Waits (4 · 2). HRs · White

.,

PADDED TABLE

Give your

mobile
home

-30 x 30" top.
-Easy to open and close slide leg lock.
-Easy to clean vinyl top.
- Baked enamel frame finish.

a solid
foundation

,· -~tftAilfS· ':.

owner't policy giW'ft
you complete coverage for
your l~clal problema-like
wind and lire d1rnag1. And
we gl~ Hrvlce '"'· when

.'

ADULT MEAL
Big Shef•
Reg.French Fries.
Turnover &amp;
. Large Soft Or~nk

P.l PAUlfY

SET .

- -~

COMPLETE

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Baker Furniture

•

NATIONWiDE
{til ~~~~~~C.!.
~11101'\Wide lllt.~IMI ,,,. h'*'""el
C:tllt.~MIIul,

Ott._

,,

-Contoured back for extra comfort.
-15" width fully padded seat.
-Easy to clean ylnyl upholstery.
-Baked enamel frame finish .

you n"d 11 motl. Atka
NIUonwlcM agent about 1
solid foundation lor your
mobile home.

HOW. Ofke;

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Mobile home• are sptclal
tlomti and need special
Insurance protecllon. So, 1
Nationwide Mobil• Home-

P"-

home.
For devotions, Mrs. Webb
read the 37th Psalm. The
Lord's Prayer was given ln
unison, and Mrs . Lillian
Weese gave the thOQI!ht for
the day. Mrs. Bernice Carpenter read "Why Worry".
Mrs. Letha Morris gave "The
Greatest Charity", and Mrs.
Webb read "Faith, Hope and

Love".
The travellng prize, won by
Mrs. Lillian Weese, was
donated by Mrs. Isabelle
Simpson . . Others attending
were Wilson Carpenter ,
William Stewart, Ralph
Webb, Bert Grimm and
Melanie Weese.

;Grange elects officers

(10th). Powell (22ndl. Carty
(18th).

307 Spring Ave. ·
· Pomeroy, 0.
m-2318

enjoys picnic

''
';RACINE - The annual
picnic of the Past Officers
Club of Racine Chapter 124,
O,E.S. held Thursday at the
~C!Q)e of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
q,jpun, Letart Falls.
· •In the absence of Mrs.
t..BU..a Circle, president, Mrs.
&amp;alph Webb presided. A
Bicentennial project was
discussed along with the
observance In 1976 to comQ\I!_morate the founding of
th~. Raclne Chapter 75 years

Pomeroy
~

0

MIIIIt I cave In (and blo1110m out)? - NOT SOlD ON
BEING PREGNANT AGAIN
" 'tf' ~f-.:':
'., . ~.
DearNot': •
' lfYI)Il can't agree jllllt DOW, why not table the decision for
aiiother· six 111011tha or so? Your attitude migbt change once
Beverly is past the "terrible two's." Or Dirk's migbt-once he
explores the cost of orthodonture, children's clothes, college,
and such.
.. (In case he keeps pitching- and wins- relax, "N. S.":
1/le second one is usually easier and more fun. -If

~r;tub

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
!Ql W. Main

+++

•
·" I'm utterly disgu8ted with the TV advertising lately.
They're allowing things I never dreamed would be mentioned :
feminine pereonala, even more peraonal than last year's
"f!Pray ," If this continues, they'll be pitching male contraceptives next on TV. Your thougbta on the subject?

Class members
stage party

---

regarding the

Dear C and C:

~

-

lbeory

IIC!mtiflc llludy.
•
:: Slnee ozone can be produced commercially, what is the
reaaon for going througb all the hllllllle of gettlng aeroaol C8IUI
banned? Why can't we manufacture enough ozone and release
it, to coWJterbalance the effect of the Duorocarbons?
•• Since o11011e can be proG!ced commerdally, what Is the
rea1011 for going througb all the hllllllle of gettlng aeroeol C8IUI
banned? Why can't we manufacture enough ozone and release
It,. to COWlterbalance tile effect of the Duorocarbons?
Allo, since o1011e Is produced by ll8htnlng, won't nature
take care of tile problem herself by causing more thunder
storms? Isn't it true that we have been having more heavy
ll8htnlng atorms In recent )'t!lll'l?
Polllibly you have a IIC!entlst friend wbo could make
oomments on my letter?. - CURIOUS AND CONCERNED

..

University leaders have
been enthusiastic about the
program's potential for
stepping up efforts to Improve food production in
hungry nations.
"The program . .. provides the mandate we
have sought for many years
- to .wor~ as partners with
the f~deral government,
using the power of science
and education to help feed our
hungry neighbors," said
Elmer Kiehl, dean of
agriculture at the University
of Missouri and chairman of
the agricultural division of
the National Association of
the State Universities and
Baltimore
130 003 11~9 12 2 Land Grant Colleges.
Detroit
000 300 OOQ--J 9 1
In
another
recent
Cuellar , Mitchell (3) and
Hendricks ; Bare, Walker (5), statement, Chancelor Daniel
LaGrow (7) and Freehan . WP - G. Aldrich of the University
Mitchell D -Ol . LP -Bare (8-12).
HRs Hendricks (8thl. Baylor of California, lrvlne, and
(22nd l
president-elect
of
the
Milwaukee
000 320 01()---.6 13 0 association of universities,
Boston
010 004 30x- 8 12 3 praised the program as "a
Slaton, Murphy (6 ), Austin significant new vehicle" for
( 7 }, Anderson (7) and Por ter ;
world hunger.
Lee, Willoughby (5), Drago (8) fighting
and F1sk , Montgomery (5). WP - Aldrich called the plan the
Wiltoughby (5·21 . LP -Murphy
(1 .7) . HRs Aaron [12th), Lynn most significant event In the
(21th) .
history of U.S. land grant
Oakland
010 003 31Q-- 8 12 2 colleges since their creation
Minnesota
600 202 OOx- 10 15 4 ln 1862.
Abbott, S1ebert (S), Lindblad
Findley said the program
(61 and Tenace ; Buller , John son (6), Burgmeler {7) and can include efforts
to
Roof
WP -Butler (4 .4). LP Abbott (5 -4)
HRs -Thompson strengthen research

~

W.

tlilmlna ozone la)"er of tile atmoophere that 18 now Ul1dei' close

...

set for sale

~

A 'Difftl'alt' Qaeltloa

the meetlng, and announced a
APPLE GROVE - A
dlstticl meetplg In Athens, · •
rummage sale wail plllnnl!d
Sept: . 21. .'!'itree birthdays :
for oct: 13-15 dtJrlng a recent
were observed,-and memben .~
meetlng of the Apple Grove
were served refreshments by :
United Methodist Women at
Mrs. Slilrley Ables and Mrs. :
the church. The sale will be at
the Community Hallin Letart Allee Balser.
Attending besides those :
from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m. each
named were Mrs. Edith ~
days.
Mrs
Betty
Shiveley Manuel, Mrs. Iona Hupp, :
prese~ted the program which Mrs. Lucllle Rhodes, Mrs ...,:
opened with the group singing Bertha Roblnson, Mrs. Eileen ..;
Buck, Mrs. Florence
. Smith •
"Showers of Blessings" with
and
Mrs.
Julia
NorriS.
Mrs . Bess Parsons at the
... --- - · ·
·""·
piano. Mrs. Dolly WoHe gave
BIRTHDAY HONORED
a prayer. The program was
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Roush, :·
on Jude with members
Middleport,
entertained ~
reading verses. A question
and answer period followed. Sunday with a dinner par!f In ~·
· Mrs. Donna Hill presided at celebration of the recent :·
birthday of their son, David, ~
4. Joining the other Roush ;f
children,. Shelley,
. . Lori'1 •• ·
Kimberly, Terri and Bran- ~
don, were Mr. and Mrs. :·
Burrell Dawson, New Haven. :
Mrs. Edith Roush, David's ::·
grandmother, was unable to : ·
attend. Cake and ice cream :
Members
of
the were served following the :
Homebuilders Class of the dinner.
:
N
Middleport Church of Christ
were in Athens Tuesday night
See The
to stage a party for 57
patients at the Athens Mental
Latest in
Health Center.
Games were conducted
Fall Shoe
with prizes awarded to the
winners, and refreshments
were served. Travellng to
Styles
'
Athens were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, Mrs .
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Reva
Beech, Mrs . Coleen Van
Your Thom MeAn Store
Meter, Edward Evans and
~iddleport, Ohio
Mrs. Nora Rice.

Findley's plan, initially
offered as a separate bUI, was
later adopted as an amend·
ment to the House's version
of the annual foreign aid
authorization bilL With
bipartisan approval and the
support
of
the
administration, the amendment
won
uncontest
passage when the House
passed the aid bill last week.
In the Senate, where
Hubert H. Humphrey, DMinn., became a cosponsor of
the plan earlier in the year,
aides said prospects for
approval of the program
were good. The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, working from the
House-approved aid bill
which Includes the FindleyHumphrey
plan,
was
scheduled to begin voting on
its version of the aid blll
Wednesday, and a Humphrey
aide said no opposition to the
''Famine trevention '' section
has surfaced.

American League
East
Bos ton
Balli more
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Detroit

Da~e

week.

Helen He!P
Us••• By Helen Bottel

•'

Approval of the program
"is the fint step In the.
revolution for sufficiency of'
food ·... The" American·
people could not make a
greater contribution to world
peace and prosperity,",
Findley said.

programs In developing
countries by supporting In·
ternational
agricultural
research
centers, and
' building Institutions which
worlc: directly with small
farmers in developing
countries.

· Hfamtne prevention" plan
which has drawn lavish
praise
from
leading
university spokesmen Is
moving rapidly to~ard
congressional approval this

pm

Ohio games

"

o

Buffalo

w.
5

M iami
NY Jets
New England

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDI"I'OR
WASHINGTON UPI - A

This

ed

. United Pnll 'lnternational . Westminster 6 ·Muskin.gum 0
Ohio St. 21 Mich. St . D
Otterbein 26 ManchesterO
Bell St . 38 Tot . 28
DePauw 28 Wooster 8
Bowling ' Green · 23 Brigham Mt. Union 55 Geneva 7 Ohio
Young 21
Otllo Wesleyan 21
Ohio Unlv. 6 Central Mich. 6 Northern 8
tie
Kenyon 24 Sethanv 12
~ent
St.
31
Northeast Cantre 28 Oberlin 0
Loullll"l 29
•
:·
Ashland 3.4 Ferris St . 10
Mleml 50 Marshall 0
Bluffton 15 Taylor 8
Akron 27 Western Mich . 21 Thle~ 35 -Western ReS'erve 21
Cln. 19 RIChmond 6
Yo!Jngstown St . 10 Central St.
.
.Eeatern Ky. lO Dayton 24
Wittenberg
19
Baldwin · Albion 10 Defiance 3

Major Lngue Sfi1ndln9~
By United Pres! lnterniltional

T

East

yards and scored four touchdowns.
Ninth-ranked Penn State,
which squeaked by Temple
last week, bounced back In
solid fashion, thumping
Stanford 34-14. Rich Mauti
scored two TDs and Chris
Bahr kicked field goals of 39
week~
and 3;1 yards.
No. 6 Auburn~ whose hopes
had to be enlivened after
Alabama was thrashed by
Missouri last Monday, sufUnited Press International
fered a disheartening blow
Penn St at Oh io Sf
when It was upset 31-20 by Miami
at Mich . St
unranked and unheralded Ball St at Ohio Unlv
So MISSissippi at .Bowling
Memphis State. Kippy Brown Green
threw for two TDs to present V1rgin ia Tech ' al Kent St .
Tol at Villanova
former
Alabama
aide Memphis
St. at Cinn
Richard WliUJtmson his first Akron at Dayton
win as a college head coach. Ashland at C W . Post
Youngstown St at Tenn Tech .
Elsewhere Saturday, Edinboro St at Baldwin UCLA, headed by John Wallace n
Heidelberg at Ohio Northern
Sciarra's three TDs, ripped Marietta at Caoital
Iowa State 37·21, No. 10 Texas Slippery Roc k at Musklngum
n·
A&amp;M blanked Mississippi 7~, Otterbein at Kenyon
No. 11 Texas routed Colorado Wooster at Mt Union
Den 1son at Juniata
State 41Ml, Miami of Ohio DePauw at Oh io Wesleyan
extended the nation's longest Wittenberg at Delaware
Hanover at Bluffton n
unbeaten string to 24 games Case
-Western Reserve at
with a 50·0 drubblng of Allegheny
Central St. at Lincoln Mo . n
Marshall, Tennessee upset Adrian at Defiance n
14th ranked Maryland 26-8, Anderson at Findlay n
ton at Tavlor
No. 15 Florida blasted SMU Wilming
Bethany at John Carroll
40-14, Wake Forest stunned Hiram al Alma
17th ranked North Carollna
State 3().22, No. 18 (tie)
Colorado trimmed California
Major Lngue Resutts
34-27, Rice ripped No. 18 (tie) '
By United Press International
Houston 24-7, South Carollna
National League
020 001 OOQ-3 7 1
ambushed Georgia Tech 23- Montreal
Pittsburgh
000 101 02)( - 4 9 0
17, Army ran over Holy Cross
Blair,
Fryman
(8)
and
44-7,
Navy
shellacked Carter , Demery, Tekulve (7 ),
(8), Giusti (9) and
Virginia 42-14, Tulane Hernandez
Sanguillen. WP -Hernandez {7 downed OeiiiSOn 17-13 and 2) LP -Fryman (8 -11) . HR -Zisk
Northwestern
surprised (19th I
Purdue 31-25.
New York
000 000 020--2 7 2

Wddlife

Ohio College results

' Exhibition st11ndings
Final NFL
By United Press International
American Conterence

x-includes Coltege All-Star reMonlreal (Roger s 10 -11 J al
sult
New York. (Koosman 12 13 },
Saturday's Results
8 . 05 p m .
Houston 24 Chicago 13
Philadelph ia (Christenson 10Miami 31 NY Giants 13
5) at St Lou is ( Rasmussen 4
Detroit 27 Cleveland 24
A}. 6 30 p .m .
Dallas 17 Plllsburgh 16
San Diego (F olkers 6-9) at
Atlanta 17 Philadelphia u
Los Angeles. ( Hooton 16-9),
Cincinnati 20 New Orleans 0
10· 30 p m
San Francisco 24 Green Bay 3
A llanta (Easterly 1-8 ) al San
Minnesota 14 san Diego 14 . ot
Francisco (Halicki 9-13). 1LOS
Sunday's Results
pm
Denver 21 Sf Louis 17
Tuesday's Games
NY Jets vs. New England. Pittsburgh at Chicago
cancelled , strike
Montreal at New York. n
Houston at Ci ncmnali, n
San Diego at Los Angeles , n
Atlanta al San Francisco. n
Philadelphia at St Louis, n

po=. Irish, ranked No. 8,
United Press lnlernollonal
East
open with a no-name offense.
Army 44 Holy Cross 7
Rick Slager, who logged only
•
Boston u. 31 Maine 21
18 minutes playing time at Sllrll'lO'V IS
Delaware St. 29 Wm . Pat --,;
terson 0
quarterback last year, will
E. Stroudsburg 7 Slippery
Rock Q
direct an attack that has lost
Ithaca 30 St. Lawrence 6
eight starters from the team
UCt
Kenyon 24 Bethany 12
Which upset Alabama ln the
Lehigh 27 Millersville 18
·
New Hampshire , 24 West
Orange_Bowl on New Year's
COLUMBUS (UPI) _ A
Chester o
day
Penn St. 34 Stanford 14
'
survey to determine how the
Syracuse 24 Villanova 17
During the weekend, Ok· public uses state wildlife
Waynesburg St. 19 Frostburg
7
•
lahoma, Ohio State, Southern areas 18
being conducted
St
West Virginia 50 Temple 7
Ca lif orn Ia, Ml c hi gan an d jointly by the Ohio State
West va st 24 w. va . Tech o
Pem State all emerged easy Uru'versity and the DepartSouth
Abilene Christian 34 Troy
wlnnera. That can only mean ment of Natural Resources'
State 7
g~r:,i~asr~ l&amp; ~~r~ey
bad news to the upstarts who Division of WUdlife, which
had hoped to climb back to will also comblnefor a future
Florida 40 SMU 14
~sperlty
d 1
Oh' '
Grambling 40 Morgan St . 7
·
.
stu Y o measure
to s
Kentucky 27 Virginia Tech s
OhiO State and Michigan woodcock population.
Memphis St. 31 Auburn 20
took care of two Big Ten
"The wildlife area survey
Navy 42 Vlrlgnla 14
dreamers- Michigan State
. . .
s Carolina 23 GeorgIa Tech
.
Will help the .diVISIOn
17
and WJsconsin- by beating determine the Various
Tennessee 26 Maryland 8 The
• &lt; Ciladel 21 Presbyterian 0
them on their own_ h.em.'• .!! tecreational uses of tl!e'areaS-"'
Tulllne 17 Clemson 13
turfs.
,._,.,.,,_
order to develop•l.rograms
Wake Forest 30 N.C. state 22
Third ranked Ohio 'State to
maintain
quality
vanderbllt,J{d;;:,•tanooua 7
opened Coach Woody Hayes' recreation" division Otief
Akron 27 W.Michlgan 21
25th
b dr bbl
'
Carleton 23 Cornell 20
. season Y
u
ng Dale Haney said Saturday.
DePauw 28 wooster Ohio 8
Michigan State 21~ at East
During a one-year perind
E . Michigan 30 Indiana St . 7
Lansing. 'lbe win avenged questiorutlres are belng put
:~~~~~s.'?o 1 ~":~n~;oca 14
last year's 16-14 loas which on car windshields at 43
Kansas st. 17 TulSa )6
had bolltered Michigan -"''d llf
Michigan 23 Wlsconson 6
areas.,
Miami Ohio 50 Marshall 0
State' s dream of ta king the wuFall ewoodcock
hunters will Nebraska 10 LSU 7
Did Ten Utle this time Pete
be -'-ed the
d
of
North Dakota 34 Montano St .
....,
·
a...
sex an age
to
~ acored on TD nms of migratory and resident birds. Nor,th Texas 7 Droke 3
siUndnlne va•cls and Arcliie Th
will also be 8Sked to Ohio
Northwestern 31 Purdue 25
'---~ ..ey
St. 21 Michigan St. 0
Grlflln gained over 100 yarda ·submit a wing from each Washington St . 18 Kansas 14
fot tile 22nd successive time woodcock taken.
Arkansas 53~"\:',~"t!rce o

cond

Pro
·Famine ·prevention· scheme
standings BASEBALL
g~ins support in Congress

0" ...,, ....._. ...............,,~y ... ..., ...... .,

~503

Co

MIDDLEP()RT, OHIO

lfJ CQpyr ighl 11115 8u•~el' Ct&gt;el S,.tlems , In!;,

UOP 31 UC Davis 13

.-.
,.,
'.

•

't:

:·;

Officers were elected and
coinmittee
chairpersons
were appointed at the
Thursday night meeUng of
the Rock Sprlngs Grange at
the hall.
Elected
were
Fred
GOeglwin, master; William
G"iueser, overseer; Helen
!i1dford, lecturer; Amos
r:ionard, steward; James
Clinkle, assistant steward;
ll)luna Grueser, chaplain;
l;iicille Leifheit, treasurer;
l!tancea Goegleln, !ecretary;
Homer Radford, gate keeper;
Ethel Grueser, Ceres; Helen
BladLiton, Pomona; Louise
Radford, Flora;
Betty .
Cont,le, lady
assistant
ltftard, and AmOII Leonard,
exeutive committee.
ApPointed • were · Elma
Ltl'gcks, pianists; Lottie
U!o~d, chairwoman of
&amp;uen'a activities; Lucille
Leifheit, youth cbaltwoman;
Mu .
Conkle, • juvenlle
cllalrwoman; WilHam
Rl JliJtd, Jegillative agent.
M8egbig time waa changed
• 1Ai.?:30 p.m. Reported ill was

Mrs.

Eleanor Enevoldsen.
Mrs. Lottie Leonard thanked
all th011e who helped with
serving during the year. A
thank-you note was read from
Lynn and Greg Bailey for a
wedding gift.

and new offlel!n_were_!!lected_ meeting of the Junior
, American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39 at
the Pomeroy hall.
The unit "adopted " Bill
Rovnak, a veteran at the
Arcadia Nursing Home,
Coolville and Sherrie Mar·
shall, a cystic fibrosis child, .
for
r e me in b r a n c e s
MONDAY
throQghout the year. They
RACINE PTO at Racine also made a,rrangements to
Elementary School 7:30p.m . fill Irick and treat bags for
with a bleenteMlal program
the boys in Harding Cottage
to be presented. Parents and at the Xenia Soldiers and
teachen to be introduced.
Sailors' Orphans Home .
LETART FAU.S PTA first
Donations were made to the
meeting of year, 7:30p.m. at Lonnie LeMaster hospital
school with teachers night to
fund and to muscular
be held.
dis trophy . It was reported
MEIGs.GALLIA OCSEA, 8 that Charlotte and Robln
p.m . at the. Cheahire Masonic Lehew, members who reside
Building .
In Columbus had staged a
MIDDLEPORT Business muscular dlstrophy carnival
and Professional Women'A contributing $17.63 . to the
Club, 7: 30 p.m. at the WTVN campaign . A $10
Columbia Gas Co. office. contribution was made to the
Representative of 648 Mental Meigs Band Boosters.
Health Board to speak on
Elected for the 1975-76 year
upcoming levy. Program wlll
feature discussion on employment problems.

Peggy Girolaml,
vice.
president; Denise Marshall,
secretary;
Lori Wood,
treasUrer; Rhonda Reuter.
chaplain; and Tracey Jef·
fers, sergeant-at...rms. Installation by Pam Powers,
eighth district president, wlll
take place Sept. 23 with the
juniors from Racine and the
junior president of FeeneyBennett Post 128 to be lnvi'ted.
Mrs . Veda Davis, junior
advisor, extended thanks for
cards and flowers during her
illness. She displayed books
and papers provided by
Debbie, Charlotte and Robin
Lehew about the Freedom
Train.
Cheryl Lehew gave a
prayer to open the meeting,
and the pledge to the flag and
the preamble were given in
unison.
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Robert
Couch and Mrs. Grace Pratt
served pizza and soft drinks.

SocI.aI

calendar

MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
p .m . at the school. Introduction of· teachers and
other school personnel In·
eluding the Meigs Local
superintendent and assistant
superintendent and the
principal of the Meigs Junior
High School. Executive
committee will serve refresh·
ments.
CHESTER PTA, 7:30p.m.
at the elementary school with
"get acquainted" night for
new parents and teschers to
be observed.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30p. m . at the home of Mrs.
Charles McDaniel,
270
Walnut St., Middleport.
TUESDAY
SALISBURY PTA, 7 :30
p.m . Program by John Lisle.
MEIGS Athletic Boosters,
7:30p.m. Bring a friend.

fVerrys .hold reunion\ Nuptial vows read
Descendants of Jacob and
Catherine Werry met at the
home of James and Karen
Werry and sons Jimmy,
Randy and Ricky, of Morning
Star for a reunion Agu. 31.
Attending were Mrs.
Charles ( Lucetria) Werry,
Herman Werry, Mrs. Eleanor
Werry, Ralph Werry, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Werry, Debbie
and! Tammy, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Werry, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Smith, Don
and Mike _and Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Arnold, Pomeroy
RD .
Mr. and Mrs . John Werry,
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Werry,
Hemlock Grove ; Mr . and
Mrs. Paul Werry, Don and
Gregg, Mrs. Margaret Werry
Phelps and Mary Upthegrove, Dayton; Mr. and
Mrs .
Harold
Werry,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs .
Walter Werry, Paula, Denise
and Glen Werry, Mason, W.
Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Werry,
Kevin· and Eric, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Philip Werry, Ray,
Eddie and Janet, Chester ;
Mr. _I!!Jd Mrs. Mlk~ Werry and

Brandon, Belpre; Mrs. Steve
Price and Stephanie, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Werry, Middleport ;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E .
Holter and Kevin , Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Holter and Jamy,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Card and
Aaron Bradley, Dan Earich,
Cambridge; David and Jill
Earich, Westerville; Carol
Burdette, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs . Harold
Werry. Gallipolis, were
camplnggueslsof the Werrys
on the reunion weekend .
Other weekend guests ineluded Mrs. Lucetrica Werry,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Werry, Dan and Gregg, and
Mary Upthegrove, Dayton .
Visiting on Saturday
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Michael L. Roach and Misty,
- Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Circle, Carmel; Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Tuttle and
John, Eagle Ridge, In addition to many of those who
attended the Sunday reunion.
The 1976 reunion will be at
the home of Mr . and Mrs.
Philip Werry on Sunday of
Labor Day weekend.

REVIVAL SERVICES, 7:30
each evening through Sunday
at
Snowville
United
Methodist Church, SR 681,
five miles west of SR 33 with
the Rev. Howard Mayne,
pastor, in charge. Special
singing. Everyone welcome.
FRIENDLY CIRCLE,
Trinity ChW'ch, 7:30 p-. m.
Mrs. Pearl Mora, program .
leader.
'XI GAMMA MU Sorority
I&gt;J roLL Y t;KA MER
meeting and progressive'
dinner, 6:30p.m. Appetizers
prepared by Debbie Finlaw'
wUI be served at the home of
Richard Finlaw, 512 E. Main
St., Pomeroy. Maln course
dinner at home of Annie ·
almost splll proof.
Polly's Problem
Chapman . Meeting and
I find It most useful to keep
DEAR
POLLY
My
dessert at home of _Jane
husband has a pair of real an old shower cap in the
Bourne.
nice corfam shoes that have a kitchen to wear (especially
AUXILIARY of Veterans build-up of polish that nothing just after I have had my hair
Memorial Hospital will meet · will remove. We were using done) whenever I cook or fry
at the hospital at 7 p.m. From liquid white but along the way onions or anything with a
the hospital they will go to the changed to a cream that has heavy odor. Such odors cling
home of Dr. R. Pickens at hardened and I have spent to clothes and hair. Also this
hours trying to chip it off with cap comes In handy when a
7:30p.m.
the tip of a nail file. I also sudden shower comes up and
CHESTER Council 323,
tried leavlng a damp cloth on I have to run out to the yard
DaQghters of America, 8 p.m .
them for hours but that did and bring in clothes or toys in
at the hall. Potluck refresh- not help. These shoes are so a hurry. I am always amazed
menls. Quarterly birthdays comfortable, show·litUe wear at the new ideas the readers
will be observed.
after almost two years and have.- HAPPY.
Group ll, Middleport First required almost no "breaking
DEAR POLLY - Golf balls
United Presbyterian Church, in" so .he hates to part with can be neatly and easily
7:30p.m. at the church with them. Is there some stored in an egg carton.
Mrs. Carl Horky, hostess; relatively simple answer to
Cut your brown paper
Mrs.
Helen
Shuler, this problem? - M.G.B .
grocery hag into convenient
devotions; Mrs. Joseph
DEAR M.G.B. - There are sizes to have on hand for
Bailey, program; a review of many flnlsbes on such shoeS draining bacon and other
a book by Marjorie Holmes. so one would always do well fried foods. This is neat and
Thank offering to be taken. to ask at the time of purchase economical and the brown
OIDO ETA PID CHAP- as to tbe care required. Some paper is quite absorbent. TER, Beta Sigma Phi only need to have the dirt VIRGINIA
Sorority, 7:30p.m., Columbus wiped off and require no
DEAR POLLY - I wad up
and Southern Ohio Electric polish. I received conflicting a soft plastic bag that comes
Co. Program, "What Women opinions from three sboe from the cleaner and use It as
are Heir To" by Sandy Korn . repair shops so anythlng,_you a dust rag on days when I am
Hostesses, Sandi Sargent and try Is at your own risk since not uslng furniture polish . I
Kathy Cumings. .
even those wbo care for sboes think this is particularly good
· FRIENDLY CIRCLE, prolessloually do not agree. for anyone allergic to house
Trinity Church, : 7:30 p.m. One said the thick coat of dust as the static keeps the
Mrs. Pearl Mora will have polish might he dissolved dust from Dying around.
the program.
with paint tlllnner or cleaning MRS. L.G.
Duld applled with a white
HERE ONE DAY
cloth. rest since this may
Howard Pill!l!lll, ·!J'oronto,
remove the color of tile finish Ohio visiied one day last
on lbe shoes;
week with his daQghter, Mrs.
I was also advised that any Bobby Roush, Middleport.
such removen wUI.Jeave the
later meetlng.
·shoes stlclfy 'and perluaps In
FAMILY ENTERTAINS
Highlights of the Hershey, even WOfl!e conditions, If
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice
Pa. mideastern conference possible. ·i'bere are special and their son, Billy, hosted a
were given by Venma Rue. pollsbei and a transparent "block" picnic recently at
Ann Rupe gave a short paste
for such shoes but theq- Cherry Ridge farm .
resume of her year In Africa, I think you sboald take yours Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
. Butcher
'
and a hobo party was an- to a shoe repair man so he Jun
and son Jeff,
nounced for September.
could see them. - POLLY Mr. and Mrs. R~ll Carson
June
Van
Vranken
DEAR POLLY - Today, and sons Steven and Roger,
presented a program on and not for the first time, I Mr. and Mrs . Larry Baker
"Heritage Heartbeat" with knocked over a full bottle of and sons Shawn and Matthe officers, Norma Ams- liquid Door wax so you can thew, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam
bary, June Watton; Rose wei! ~lne that my Pet Kennedy ,
Mrs.
Alice
Sisson and Margaret Follrod Peev~ is with those tall tippy Robeson, Mr~. LucUle Schserving refreshments.
bottles of wwt, detergents, wartz, Chester Morris, Mr .
The next meellng will be etc. It ·seems such things and Mrs. William Brlckles,
hosted 'by Nellie Brown and could be put in low squat Mr. and Mrs. Ron Hanning,
Ruby Baer.
containers that are at least and Bruce Decker.

Polly's Pointers
Conflicting opinions
on shoe care

Two_contributions made
Contributions of t50 each
were made to . the Meigs
County Senior _, Citizens
Program and the Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Hlstorlcai
Society · by 1
PreCeptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Corority
meeUng Thursday night at
the hone of Mrs. Margaret
Follrod.
The chapter decided to
lnvlte Maxine PliDilDler of
the Mental Health Board to
speak at the riext meeUng.
Siwon Bailey of the Cancer
Society will be asked to talk
on the monthly cllnica at a

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ASSOCIATED DRUGGISTS

SAVINGS
FOR FALL

MAALOX

12 oz.
SIZE

REG. 11.59

ANACIN

$329

. I

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\

300's
REG.
1
4.39

OORICIDIN
25's
REG.
'1.45

HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS
6.5

oz.

REG.
1
1.65

ALKA-SELTZER
72's
REG. ~
'2.39

l "ll ~fiC IIIT

.... LQIIIC

• • •• LO~I ·Q

h i l l II

179

DiLORASEPTIC
6 oz. Reg. $1.71

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

.•'·

MIDDLEPORT
.J.'

GENERA L
REVENUE

ACTUAL USE REPORT

SHAA I N G

THf GOv l Rr'i Mf~!

RACINE VILLAGE

M• ••c•• ·odGo""'' """""" S~ I MJ

Sl,ll 9

~--r~~~--1 ~~~~'~"·~·~
·"~'"~"'~
"·-~~~----~

~~~E~~==3E~~=~ dull'~'""""'~r ..,m

2

lui) I l9l41N&lt;J- Joc•lO

~~ ~CCJ U '•' t-.:1

191~

36 2 OSl DOl

RACINE VILLAGE
VILLAGE CLERK

691

RACINE , OHIO
4577 1j

4577 1

Jd.. 1111.11.11 .. r1. Jl.. i!lt .!.ll ...,u, ... u. 11/11.,1

6

!oum~IL•·~•

1 2 J.!

' f""di A ""' "'~ ooo~r.
I l&gt;IJI f und&gt; llo.&gt;l 1&gt;blo

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Minerslvlle, and Zetah
McCain and Marilyn Coulson,
CoolvUle.
The new Mr. and Mrs .
Walker are residing in
Pomeroy following a brief
wedding trip In Kentucky.

ma•

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Kt:EUSVILLE - On May
31, Karen Rae Hwnphrey,
daQghter of Mr . and Mrs . C.
Ed Hwnphrey , Reedsville,
became the bride of Gary
Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Walker, Racine.
The wedding took place in
the garden at the home of
Mrs. C. Earle Humphrey,
grandmother of the bride,
before an altar created with
log pillars and a kneeling
bench. Two large baskets of
painted daisies were used on
the pillars and single white
daisies were placed at the
front of the altar.
Mrs. Jean Frydman of
Colwnbus was pianist for the
wedding which was performed by the Rev. Freeland
Norris, Racine. Mrs . Mary
Shoults,
Ra c ine,
Ann
registered the guests.
The bride, adorned in a
handmade ecru gown of
unblea ched embroidered
muslin and lace, was
escorted to the altar by her
father. Her only jewelry was
a star sapphire necklace, a
gift of the groom . She carried
a bouquet of white daisies.
Miss Robin Humphrey,
Reedsville, sister of the
bride, served as maid of
honor. She wore a blue
flowered polyester gown with
an ecru wide-brimmed
picture hat. Attendants were
Vicki Carr, Alfred ; Karen
Anne Stone, Cleveland,
cousin of the bride; and Patti
Harr, Parkersburg , W. Va.
The attendants wore pink
flowered gowns styled the
same as that of the maid of
honor.
Miss
Joy
Co ul so n,
Coolville, cousin of the bride,
was flower girl. She wore a
gown identical to that of the
maid of honor . She wore a
band of blue· daisies in her
hair and carried a basket of
white daisy petal~.
Roger Shoults , Racine,
brother-in-law of the groom,
served as best man. The
ushers were David Hensler,
Racine ; Mark Davis, Middleport, and Tom Ball,
Pomeroy.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the
garden. The bride's table was
centered
with
an
arrangement of painted
daisies. The four-tier wedding cak~was decorated with
pale plnk and blue flowers .
Assisting at the reception
were Anita Buckley, Katrina
Batey and Jenny Machiar,
Chester ;
Linda
King,

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6 _The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. IS. 1975

Alfred ·.
Social Notes

NOBT~C~u"eoL~~.N't~·~CE, ~ .. EJ ~TO Herman Gillilan , Glady s -L' 0
Cozart, Chatmer Gi llilan , and

r

.

v
....
t
.L' as

R es ults use The Sentinel Classifieas
I

·
the un kn ow n h eirs , dev1sees
a nd next of kin of Wesley G .
Gil hlan . .=~11 o t whose pla ces o f
f ~~--------------------------~
Sunday ·s chool attendance
reside n ce arc vnk.nown and
_ At.!P ENTRY . !lo u r in g
c anno t
with
reasonable
on Sept. 7, was 44, the offering
1gence bC ascerlained
cei lin g and p&lt;;l n e linq Pllonc
$26 .62 . Dinner and table dilYo
99') ?IS.lf
u are hereby not1f1cd that
8 I? ?6 tc
you
have
bee n
nam e d
commi ttees were appointed
de fendan ts 1n a legal ac llon
for the homecoming on Sept.
e n! il led Mt ld red G1l l11an.
' REMODELING,
Plumbing .
l\dm,ni s tratr 1x of the E s talr&gt;
heat 1ng and all types of
2!.
of
We s ley
G
G1l l11&lt;1n.
gen~ r al
r e pair .
Work
Worship services were held
deceased.
Plai n 1d t. . vs
g uarant eed 20 yea r s ex:
WANTED TO &amp;UY
Blown
Lawrence G•llilan . ('1 al.
penen cc
Phone 992 2409
at 11 a.m., with Charles D.
Middleoort,
0
.
318
N.
2nd
WILL
PAY
5
1
If,...
Defendants This act 1on has
Insulation Services
1971 OLDS CUTLASS"S" CPE
5239l
Woode, leading and Duan.e
t:le e n ass,g ne d Case No 71.371.
.
for
1964 and older
26
Blown into Walls &amp; AHics
"S" Cpe., grey fmish. blk . tntenor . bucket seats &amp;
'"bber In
and 1S pendmg 1n the Court of
Sydensll'icker speaking from
dfmes .
.
STORM
console. radio. tape. au tomatrc. power steering &amp;
. 65 for 1964 and older
Common P leas.
Prob ate
Ephesians
4'22-32.
AtTEXAS WESTERN
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
01\IISIOn . Of Me rq s CounTy .
quarters
.
brak es . local 1 owner .car
MODERN 4 rm house in
REPLACEMENT
s1. 30 for 1964 and o lder
tendance was 25, offering
Pome roy . Oh 1o . 45769
BOOTS
Pomeroy
Full
basement
The obj ec t of the compla1nt
WINDOWS
halves .
$20.00. Pledges $72.00
w rth garag e. re f erences.
1972 COMET2 DR.
51S50
•s tor auth onty to set I th e r ca t
KNAPP
SHOES
SJ 4o for 1935 and ol der
ALUMINUM
please
Write
Box
729L.
co
es tate ot the decedent ro pay
Prayer services will be
6 cy l std . trans, radto , ltk e new W · W It res. blue fintsh.
dollars
SHEBOYGAN
SIDING.oSOF FITT
The
Da11y
Sen t 1ne 1.
th e debts and cos ts of ad
- - - - FOR SALE---m ce car wtth good economy
GUTTE
RS.
AWNING&lt;
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
457
69
held on Wednesday eveni ng
m1n1stering hrs esta te, wh1c h
Steel
~oe Safely Shoes
WHEAT BACK PENNIES
9·14 6tp
at 7:45 with Vernon Nease
r e~1 1
es tate rs descr1bed us
.85 A ROLL
51495
1971 MATADOR
fol lows
BUFFALO NICKELS S7.00
4 BEDRM upstairs and ba th,
from Syracuse, speaking on
Syracuse. Ohio
Twenty four (1·1! acres off
11·door. local car. air conditioned, full euipment
A ROLL
6 rm s
downsta
rrs
,
new
Ph . 9'92 -39U
the Evangelistic
thrust
the eas1 e nd o f t11 e fotlowrng
SILVER CERTIFICATES
k1lchen on Rl 3), Mason , W
9·2·1 mo.
4 10 1 mo .
real
estate,
to
w
1t
r ar t y
51.25 EACH
va
,
natural
gas,
elec
,
city
throughout the county.
acrPs of lan d out of th f' wes t
n .oo Bills- 13 .25 each.
water Phone 1 304 -773 ·51.'7,
ha lf Ol LO I NO 171:.! 1n Set110n
The Orange Christian
u .oo Gold coin$ X F cond .
a
....
ailab
le
17th
of
Se
pt.
2. Townsh1p '} , and R anqe 12 1n
US .OO
9 14 101c
Church will have its annual
the 011 10 Company 's Purct1aseCALL 742·3651
homecoming on Sunday.
in Leta r t TownShip , Me 1ys
Jlutland - Rager Wam5ley
F
URNI
SHED
apt.
3
rooms
County , Ohro , sa rd JO acre lot
Sept. 14, with the us ual
and balh, u tilrl 1es pa rd
bemq m th e north pa r 1 of the
Phone 992 2937
POMEROY, OH10 - - - -----'
morning serv1ces and a west hall of the 160 acre lot
9 12 6lc
abo\ie mc n troncd , a ruJ bernq
basket dinner at n oon, and a
the sa me p roperty conve yed
B RM MODERN home , 7
singing program, beginning
by Nancy Prcke ns. c r ~1 1 , to
WANT ADS
Your Heil Dealer
miles from Harr~ son v 1 lle
From the largest Truck or
Josep
h
MMI1n
P1
c
ke
ns
by
INFORMATION
at 1:30 p .m . Singers are lflThird
St
Racine, Ohio
Shown
by
appoin1ment
only
Bulldozer Radiator to the
dee d dated March 24 , 1?37, •"ln d
DEADLINES
Phone 992.9973
Ph . 949-59'61
Phone f5 131 839 4126
S')all est Heater Core
vited.
re co rd e d In Book 140,' clt 'Pa ge S'
M
Day Be fore Pub
9.
J2
.6tc
North
2nd Street
~'V I of thf' Deed ~ecords of r!' lJt&gt;alion
The U.M.W. of the Alfred , . Me1gs
Emergency
Nathan
B1ggs
Tune.Ups
- Batteries
Co unty, Oh 10, excePI 111 J! 14fl,onday Deadline 9 a m
949-2211 or 992 -5700
R ildiator Spectaltst
Church will have their
tour- Atre s off th e west side
Can cc ll al10n
Correcf1ons
Shock
Absorbers
· Tires COUNTRY Mob 1le Home
Co mple te a•r cond itio ning
thereof . conve ye d by Joseph Wi ll be accep ted until 9 am
Pa rk , Rl )) ten mrl es north
regular meeting on Tuesday
Muffler.
Tailpipes
.
Cooling
sa
te
s
and
serv1ce,
hea
ting
.
Mart1n P rck.c n s ro E l va for Day of Publi ca t. on
ot Pom eroy La rg e lo ts w1th
plumbi
ng
,
roofing
and
Systems.
evening, Sept. 16, at 8:00 in
P 1c kens Vari a n and Robert P
REGULATIONS
concre te paliO!r ; Si d ewalks,
general sheef mela l work
V&lt;H ra n by deed dated Mar c h
Thl'" P ub li s her reser..,.es the
We
a I so
service
runner s and o ff s tr ee t
the church basement, with
Free Estimates
25 1937 and r eco rd ed 1n Book rig hT to ed1t or r etect any ads
~ a rk.1n g
Phon e 997 7479
Volkswagens
and
othe,
Pomeroy
9
14
I
mo
Ph. 992 -2114
Thelma Henderson program
1.1 2. at PagP 33 7 of the Deed d ~emed
objectional
Th e
17 3 1 tfc
L1
NCOLN
HILL
foreign
cars.
Record s. leav•ng
twenty publ iS her
w•ll
not
be
leader and Emma Finch as
Wilbur Ward,
acre s conveyed her eby
r esponsrb le lor more than one
POMEROY
LAURELAND APARTMENT SE P T IC T ANK S cle aned
EX(AVA T !NG', doz er. loader
hostess. The prog ram s ubject
Deed Re ference
Volu me 1ncorrec 1 rn se rt 10n
Mgr.
&amp; Mechanic
61h a nd George Sts., New
and backhoe work , sep t rc
Modern Sanitat1on 992 395
162 . Page &lt;1&lt;19 , Me 1g s County
RATES
is "Are You Retired?"
Haven ,
w
Va .
IM
8·21 ·1 mo.
ta
nk
s
1nstalled
.
dump
Contact
or 992 7349
Deed Recor ds
For Wan I Ad Serv•ce
MEDIATE OCCUPA NCY
truc ks and to boys tor hire ,
Everyone welcome .
9
1a
lf
c
Yo u are rcqur r Cd to answer 5 cents pe r Word one 1n ser t1on
Se lect your 2 bedrm . town
w ill l'lau! til l d 1r t. to p so11 , €XCAV.A:TING ,
backhoe ,
the compla.nt w ithin 28 days
Mm1mum Cha r ge $1 00
The annual homecoming of
house,
Beautiful new apt
lrmestone and gravel., Ca ll
dozer
and
dilcher
. Gas,
after th e tast p ublrca t.on of
14 cents pe r word three
BACK
HOE
to
r
rent
,
hour
or
complex , appl•ances fur
Bo b or Roger Je ff er5, day
the Alfred U .M . Church will
electr•c and water lin'e
thi s notice , w h1c h wi ll be co nsec ulrvc inse rt 1ons
contract
Reg
or ex
nis
h
ed,
comple
t
ely
car
phone 992 7089, n1gh t phone
burial , basements, footers ,
publrshed on ce each wee k for
26 cents pe r word SIX co n
cevat ing type Sept•c tanks
be held on Sunday , Sept. 21,
pe led, Rent $ 128 up •n ·
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
992-2156
sepl!c
systems and brl;Jsh
s 1x s uccess •ve weeks The last secut •ve 1n sert: o ns
.
l.nstalled
Btl!
Pullins
Phon
e
elu d ing
util itie s
Ca ll
2 ll .tfc
with the usual forenoon
cleaning Will haul till d1rt ,
publr ca tron w ill be made on
25 Pe r Cent D1s c.ounl on pa•d
,9-9 2 2478
res1dent
manager,
Sam
or
top soil, sand and gravel.
Sep tembe r 29. 1975 , and lhe 28 ads and ads pa1d wdt11n 10
8-27 ffc
services. A basket dinner at
Becky Longanacre . 1 304
BEAUTY operator With Oh1 0
days for answer will com days
limesto
ne for dr iveways and
S
EWING
MACHINE,
882 2567 II n o answer , ca ll 1
noon. Afternoon program at
Lrcen se . Phone 992 3205 .
CARD OF THANKS
road s. Phone Charles R
mence on th at da l e .
Repltirs , se rv ice , all makes
(
J04)
882
2768
.
9 14 Jtp
Hatfield , Backhoe Service ,
In case of your failu re to
&amp; Ob•luary
992 2284 Th e F,abric:., Shop .
1:30 featuring the MI. Zion
9 3 12tc
$2 00 for 50 word min1mum
Rl. 1, Rutland , OhiO , 742
a n swer or otherwise r espond
Pom e roy Auth orfz ed Singe r
Ladies Trio, from Mineral · as requ•red by th e Ohio Rules
6092
Each add it ion al word 3c .
Sales and Se rv 1c e We
.4
ROOM
furnished
apartmen1
o f Crvd Pr ocedu re , judgment
7·11 ·901c
BLIND ADS
sha rpen Sc issors
Wells , W. Va . and local and
w1th wall to wal• carpet. ONE used cornet in good
Add itional 25c Charge per
b y default wrll be render~d
l
29
lfc
Phone 992 ·5908
shape 540 Phon e 992 ·5786. visiting singing g roups .
against you for the rel1ef Adver l• seme nl
WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
9 3 tfc
9· 10·6tc
de
ma
nd
ed
in
the
comp
la
int
OFFICE
HOURS
Build an all steel building at
Welcome to alL
-E LWOOD BOWER S 1-H:PAIR
8 30a m . to 5 OOp m Daily ,
Po le Barn pr ices? Golden
Swee
pers
,
toaste
rs
,
•ron!.
,
RM
FURN
ISHED
ap
l
for
4
CLARINET.
good
c
nndition
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Manning D Websler . B· JO am
to 12 00 Noon
G1an l A!I ·Sfe&amp;l Buildings ,
all small appliances Law n
12 good men needed.
re nt. Phone 992 365a
Reasonable Phone 949 .4114
Ju dge a n d Ex off• c •o Satu rday
Rt 4, Box 1.48, Waverly .
Henderson and Mr . and Mrs.
mower
,
next
to
Stat
e
High
9
3
t fc
9 15 5tc
Clerk of the Common
Ohio . Phone 947 2296
way
Ga
ra
ge
on
Route
7$140.00
a
week
full
Clair Follrod, Steve and
Pl eas Cou rt ,
7 24 lfc
Phone 985 3825
Probate Div• s•on
3 fi ND 4 ROOM furni sh ed and REDUCE sa te and fast with
Kathy attended the Harpe r
4
16
th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E .V,ap
time. $84.00 a week
Meigs County, Oh 1o
unfurnished
apartments
" water pills ," Nel son Drug
Family Reunion at Wilson
WILL TRIM or cut trees and
Phone 99? 5113·1
Room and Board
[f!l
25.
r9J
2.
a,
15.
22.
29.
6tc
'READY MIX CONCRETF.:
9 15 ·1tp
4
1?
He
s hrubbery Phone 949 322 1
Park, Sunday, Sept. 7, near
ROOM AND BOARD tor
part
time
.
Must
have
del•"ered r rg ht to you r
or 742 ·4441.
senior
c
it
ize
ns
Low
rn
come
STA RCRAFT Trailers and
Carthage Gap .
prot ec t . Fast and easy. Free
9·7 24tc:
l1v1ng. very nr ce Phone 992
Fo
ld
downs
,
1975
Galaxte
2 BEDRM . mobile home, air
es t 1ma tes Phone 992 ·3284,
NOTICE OF
Sunday afternoon visitors
35 09
car. Call 446 -0677, 9 til
$2 , 139 - Starmast er 51.729
cond il ion1ng , Racine area .
Goeg l e~n
Ready Mtx Co .
APPOINTMENT
8 2J 26tc
of Clara Follrod and Nina
.~ XL Deluxe, 51,375 . Camp
Phon e 992 5858 .
PORTABLE
TOILET
Middleport, Ohio
Case No . 21612
5.
9 3 tfc
Conley Starcrafl Sales, Rt .
RENTAL ,
Co nsfru clion
6 30 ttC
Robinson were Mr . and Mrs . E~tate of Mary M . Beard PARASOL
boutique
an
62 N Poinr Pleasant
Out door eve n ts
Phone
Dec ease d.
nounces new hours Open
Allen Follrod and Mr. and
9· 155tc D &amp; D TREE Trimmt ng . 10
Galli p o li s,
446 47a2,
ROOMS an d bath un
NotiCe is hereby given that
Tuesday through Sa turda y,
Russe ll 's Plumbing and
Frank W Port e r , Jr ., of R D
furnished house. 1650 Lin · -~--~~~------, years experie n ce In su red ,
Mrs . Frank Follrod of MI.
Sept Sp ec1al ~ Permanents COUPLE wtfhout pre..,.ious
Heat 1ng
coin Ht s Phone 992 .3874 .
rfr ee es timat es . Cal! 992 ·3057,
Racine. Oh 10 (mailm g addre ss
Reg S17 50 n ow $15. We also
Sterling, Ohio and Mr . and P 0 . Box 486 , Pomeroy , Oh10)
8 19 t fc
Stegler &amp; Monogram
9 5·1fC
Coolvtlle Ph one 11) ~667
busine ss experience , bu t
do
blow c uts and blow
304 1
wil
l1ng
to
work
and
learn
Mrs. Dana Aleshire of has been duly appo 1nled
dry mg
Phon e (6 14) 985
Executor of the Last Will and
4 30 lfc
together pleasa nt profitable LASALLE HOTEL. MID
4141
Operator, San dra
FUEL OIL
Worthington, 0.
Tes tament of Mary M Beard ,
work
Contact
Amway
DLEPORT.
OHIO
.
ROOMS
Kerns, and Helen Newland
Dis tr ibutors Pnone ( 1I. 989
Mr. and Mrs . Clair Woode de ceased, late of Meigs
$5 UP SPEC IAL RATE S
9 10 12tc
WORK , Excavat ing,
County , Ohio .
2353 for •ntervtew
Heating Stoves DOZER
BY WEEK OR MONTH
and Conni of Circleville, 0.,
land clearing , ponds and
Credtfor s are r equired to
9 11 4tC
TV AIR CONDITIONING
basemen ts,
and
land ·
Virgil B., Sr.
All sizes on hand, prices
called on the William Carr file their cla im s wilh said PIANO Tuning , Lan e Da nfels,
8· 26 · 26tc
scap1ng
Pullins
Ex .
Phone 992 ·2082 .
fiduci a ry withm four months.
start at $324.69.
family Friday evening and
cavat in g , p hone 992 2478
Da ted th1s 10th day ol
8-2a-26tp
-1 Wood Burning Stove
"l=URNISHED
apartment .
8 26 .30tc:
the Robert White family Septe mbe r 1975.
PEACOCKS. all ages. si ngl e
CLIP THIS AD and bring it
adults only "' Middleport
Friday night and Saturday
or pair, $6 to $25 eac h P 0
Phone 99:1 J87~.
Mann•nQ D Webster
in. for Sl5.00 discount.
REALfOR
Box 256, Cool..,.ille, or phone
3 25 tfc
Judge
'
morning while Sue assisted
{614)
667
3358
Court of Common Pleas ,
POMEROY LANDMARK
there, Saturday afternoon
; 1
'', • I I r
()
~VERYBODY
Probat e Div1sion
ROOMS and bath apt in
Meigs
County
,
Ohio
.....
~ack
W.
carsey,
Mgr.
Clair and Conni spent the
Rutland area Phone 992
DACH S HUND pupptes, 2
Phone 992-2181
5858 .
NEW LISTING- 40 acres
afternoon with Mr . and Mrs. (91 15. 22. 29. 3tc
males. and 2 females , red 6
7 27 tic
HOU S E tor sale In Rutland ,
with
timber. Some sites for
Charles D . Woode and
weeks
old
.
Phone
742
4256
.
$6 ,500. Phone 992 5a58 .
t
building
. Want Sl2,000 .
9.
l-4
·3tc
8·31
·ttc
2 BEDRM traile r , S27 per GUNS and Ammo. Our fall
assisted there Saturday
week
Atl
-utilities
paid
.
stock
is
now
here
5
BEDROOMSLike new
evening , they visited the
TO GIVE AWAY - Me1gs
Phon e 992 ·3324
Complete line of Rem . 4 RM HOUSE and bath on 3
with
lots
of
large
closets .
County Humane Society
9.7.tfc
•nglon,
W i nchester ,
William Ohlinger home at
acres
on
hard
to
p
road
.
Has
J
full
baths,
central
air
desperately need home for 7
POr~EROY LANES
llhica. Savage. Slug barrels
Phone 742 3633
Pomeroy.
mixed breed pupp ies. 6 or 7
Monday Bend League
and
heat,
therm
·o.
pane
in
stock
for
most
brand
shot
.
9 14 3tc
months old . Will not be large 2 BEDROOM trailer , e~ttra
Mrs . Genevieve Guthrie
9'-8-75
guns, but •n short supply .
windows, sun deck. and 2
ntce
Phone
992
·332
4
dog s, genlle . healthy and
PTS.
G.et them while they last
returned Sunday evening
car garage. $47,500.
8
26
tic
clean Ideal for house pets .
Red Ra1d e rs
16 .c'A~ H pa1d for all makes ana
Money short. lay .a .way
2 BEDROOMS Oak
models
of
mo
b
ile
homes
.
Call
949
4917
or
992
·5906
Cre
w
's
Comets
14
from a weekend in Columbus
your fall hunting needs. New
Phone area code 614 423 ·
after 12 ntlon .
2
Red
Devils
8
BEDROOM
furnished
Fall
store
hours
starting
floors,
F.A.
furnace,
city
and Sugar Grove, 0. She
'9531
mo bile hom e No pets Call
Screw Offs
8
Se pt . 5. 10 a m to 9 p .m ,
water,
basement,
and
a
992 7479 .
reports the O'Brien's getting
Wonders
0
~ ~--~- --- -~~-4 13 lie
Monday Saturday. Village
fenced
yard.
Asking
--~
-----~
AKC
Reg.
English
Springer,
3
Odd Balls
/J
8·22 tfc
Gun Shoppe , 266 Mill St ,
along very well, and Mrs.
month p~ps , brown and
$10,000.'
H!qh individual qame - R
Phone 992 5177, financ ing
wh 1te. Phone 992 ·2639
Yost improving from a recent Glasgow , 202 Second high
available.
ON 33 NORTH
2
space for rent in
individual game - J Cline,
9.9 6tp TRAILER
9-3·26fc
fall in the hospital , and ex- 20
Middleport
Phone
992
5434
bedrooms
,
really
nice
with
I
.,LO turn.ture.~ ice boxes ,
8-29 ·26tc
paneling, and wall to wall
pecting to go home in a few
High series ~ R Glasgow ,
brass bed s, or complete
ONE SIGLER gas heate r ,
MAIN
527
.
Second
hig
h
se
ries
c
households
.
Wrffe
M
o,
~or
carpeting.
Garage and
days. Her granddaughter Matthews , 524 .
NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
73,000 BTU 14, 000 BTU air
Miller , Rt . 4, Pometoy,
large
lot.
$16,000.
PoMEROY,O
YOU CAN save several hum..
Apartments in Middleport. 1
conditioner . $100 . Phone
Beth Yost Cadinee is leaving
Team high game ~ Red
Ohio Call 992 ·7760
WATER FRONT- 6 room
red dollars at Kingsbury
bedroom apts from $104 plus
(3041 882.3219
Devils
,
900
Team
high
se
ries
10
·7·74
to join her husband in GerA MILLION SSS VIEW- 3
Homes Sales this week , On a
elec Call 992 ·3273 or see
9 10.6fc
Red Devils, 2418 .
house with level building
- ------~- -- --12 , 14 ft wide or double
Mrs . Keetley. Apt . 101 ,
nice bedrooms with closets,
many for three years.
lot . A good buy for $28 ,500.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
I TO 5 acres of land in Me •gs
w ide Come in to 1100 East
Riverside Apartments.
lovely bath with bui II in
INTERNATIONAL
Early Sunday
Co . Phone 742 ·4256
NEAT 2 BRS StoveMain Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
S-2B-26tp 1965
Travel All VB , et andard
Alinanac
Mixed League
lavatory. the dining R
9 14 Jtc
or call 992 7034
refrigeratar
.freezer,
shift, air conditioneC, tinted
Sept. 7.1'1'75
~ - - ------- - ~ - 9·14 ·6t c TWO Furnished apts Kay
makes every meal a
By
United
Press
Incarpeting in kit, lug., and
glass . Call 992 2622 after 5
Sta ndings - Tom 'S Carry
special
occasion. Sparkling
Cecil.
a7
South
Second
Ave,
P
m.
ternational
Out, Jack's Dairy Bar , Team
bath. Nice varnished floors
Middleport, Ohio Phon e
1974 CASTLE 12 x 65 2 bedrm ,
9 9 .6tc
spotless oak floors, a full
No . 3, F'uiHns Excavatmg,
in bedrooms. $13,SOO.
Today is Monday, Sept. 15,
992
5262
2 full baths. to tal elec
Hdl &amp; Mayer Barbers. Team YARD SALE. Se pt 18, 19. and
MOBILE HOME
3
a 21 tfc CANNING tomatoes, green basement with utility space
furn iture , washer
and
the 258th day of 1975 with 107
No . 6.
and recreation space,
20 9 a m till 4 p m Walter
dryer.
Phone
949
·3655.
bedrooms.
cook
and
bake
H1gh
ind
ivi
dual
game
a
nd
red
pe
pper
s
Cleland
to follow.
Brown residence . 1h mile
forced air furnace . 5 yrs.
9·12 ·6tc PRIVATE meellng room for
Larry Dugan 235; Be t ty
Fa rm s. Geraldine Cleland .'
units, naf .• gas furnace,
below Reedsville on S R
'lbe moon is between its Smith 197 .
Racine Phone 949 4121.
old . Aboul 'I• acre. $19,500.
any
organization.
phone
99
2
and
lol for only $9500.
124
.
Furnllure
,
clo
thing
,
Second high •nd . game ~
B 19 lfc
3975.
512,SOO .OO Buys this
first quarter and full phase.
d1shes
.
etc.
CB
350
Honda
1965
HILL
CR
EST
mob
ile
REALLY
A LOCATIONLarry Dugan 211 Betty
. J. Jllfc
motorcycle
lovely 1 floor plan older
home
For
more
in .
The morning stars are
Whitlatch 194
A
nice
3
bedroom home
-LET
us
serv1ce
your
Volks
·
------ .,..L ~ 9 15 51p
formation , call 949 5261.
home in good neigh High series - Larry Dugan
wagen , reasonable rates .
with
oak
floors,
inod. klt .,
Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and
9 10 ·81c
60a ; Betty Smi th 542.
M1dd leporf Pennzoil North
borhood. 3 bedrooms, bath,
cook
and
bake
units.
Hot
Mars.
Second high series - Ed GARAGE SALE , 5 Family,
Sec ond Street , Middleport .
dining room , lots of new
starting Monday and ending 10 x 50 MOBILE home, fur ·
water
heat
,
full
basement
Voss
549
,
Mary
Voss
503.
Phone 992 .9973
The evening star is Mernished, very clean $2,900. ONE 1975 Bass boat , 14ft. , 50
Sat urday , at 454 South Th1rd
carpeting, tile &amp; paneling.
Team h1gh game - Jac k's
and
walk
to
work .
8 19 ·261c
h
p
.
motor
with
Troll
motor,
Phone
742
5825
Ave, Middleport. 10 ll11 6.
cury,
Dairy Bar 745 .
Nautral gas heat . Nice
depth
t
inder.
Phone
992
·
$31,500.00
every day , something new
9.10·61c
Team high se rie s ~ Jack's
IN DASH 23 Channel Citizen's
yard . Close to schools.
Those born on this date are
2SSS
FOR APPOINTMENT
added every dav .
Dairy Bar 2059
Band transceiver, am .fm
9.11
.6tc
NEW BRICK &amp; FRAME9
14
5tc
under the sign of Virgo.
TO SEE
mpx radio, 8 tra&lt;:k stereo.
3 bedrooms, Rtbbon win Call 992 3965
Republican
William FOR SALE
GARAGE SALES, Sept 19 , 20,
19 7? ARROW Cam per , phone
dows for easy furniture
9 · &lt;~ tfc
Howard Taft, 27th president 1971 11 FT . YellowSione truck
and 21, 9 a m ·6 p .m Two 1969 CHEVY C10 truck. V·8.
99 ? 54 68
arrangement.
l'h baths w.
- ~ -- --------~-dressers with m1rrors.
$1,300or wlll trade t~r car of
a· 15 26 tp 1/ 1 RUNNER ,beans , pick your
oftheUnitedStates, was born
E~~J~rn.t c~~~fiiJ~n~~.a~~~ • oak
built
in
lavatories,
Wife
------'-~~--niuzzle loading r ifle , 22
equal value . Phone 992 -2:987.
own . S2 bushel . David Yost ,
Sept. 15, 1857.
:;;.t;: :. ~;; ;, : 9n562 1 or 992 2205 ••..., ... " L a~tomatic rifle with scope,
9.10-6tc
saving
kitchen,
lots
of
Great Bend, Portland , Ohio .
12 GA . high power sheets.
play
pen,
"
c, •' ' ' _o.._
"
9.1tf~C - ·t11rf:TV·- bed,
cabinet
space,
range
and
________
-ltc
9·14
S3
83
box
;
Remington
or
ba1hinette , other baby 1965 FORD truck , S250 Phone
~:. " .).~
Super X .22 mag . $2 60 box;
oven. Dining area has
furniture , stone ja rs , milk
130&lt; I 882.3390
22 L R 73c box . Save also on MAR...BI:.E top dresser and
baffles, e lectric fan , rad ios ,
double glass doors leading
9 14 6tc
antique 'china closet, Queen
new and used guns many
..,_uJ ....
record player , lawn chairs,
to patio . All electric . 1 acre.
Ann
design
.
Phone
992
·3102
used S. B. - D. B. 's, auto 's,
tools, dishes. kitchen tools, 1960 CHEV 6 cyl . standard,
after
5 p .m
Easy financing . $25,900.
pumps.
discount
on
all
new
po ts and pans , old tr unk ,
selling for parts Phone 992
9· 10.6tc
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
9·14·6tc
guns and extra barreJs .
WE CAN SELL YOUR
toys , children's clothing.
5585
one letter to each square, to
Fife's, Back of Speed Queen
curtams. b~dspreads , bags
2 BEDRM . modern house, all
9.143t c
PROPERTY
HERE'S
Laundry Mat, Jrd St , TWO m ix ed Hereford cows to
form four ordinary words.
of mortar , UQht, also other
elec., just been remodeled, 4
WHY
Experience ,
freshen soon. Also , 1969 LTD
Middlepor t.
ilem.s . ·Located at Raymond
lots, 50 x ~00 in all. Will sell
ford
Phone
843·2353
.
Service,
Action,
Honesty.
9· 12· 12tc
L Olive.r residence Phone 1969 F"IR~ANE 302 V8
reasonably . Phone f304} 882.
9·14·6tc
C' .,,..., "'"'~ ''" r.. ....
· "
992 .3366, 1/:l mile above Five
standard transmission, very
Call l\low 992-2259
~219.
~_.:
Points on State Rt. 7, watch
good .condition . Phone 992 . BED and dresser 550 South ---- -- ----~--9-10·6tC \
for signs
.
Third St., Middleport.
SOBS
Phone 992 ·507a .
9· 12 ·61c
~~~~-2~:-:-~~ ~/
_!~~tc
9·12-31p
1970 'h TON Ford P ic kup,
~(;~
5 FAMILY Yard Sa le . misc .
1975 Starflre dldsMobile
ilems, Take Rl. 124 lhrough . good condition . See at Baum ONE
with 18,000 miles On~ 1974
Lumber, Chester. Phone
Salem Center, first left off
Honda motorcycl ~ with 4,000
614 985·3301.
9. 12 .31c
Rl. 124 onto Co Rd 1. fourth
miles. Both' new con'dltlon .
~===::=:::::O';;:;~l
hou se on right. Monday -~-----------Phone 992 7692.
·Hs
~,.
through Fr iday, ·9 till 4 p .m
.,. 61
I&lt;.AMtiLtk. ,
1967
9· 12·31c
1
9 · 1.4 -Jtc
-r
~
y
WHO
Camara
.
Phone
992
·
2892,
WH,D;' THE ~u
------------I 9S7 B
d
CB 100 Honda , $250. 6
WENT ON .AN UN5UCv A R D Sale , upper section of
can be seen a
roa · 1972
piece drum set, $300. Phone 1971 KAWASAKI Phone 247CE&amp;SfUL FATIENING
Rust ic H ills , Syrac use .
way , Middleport
992 2502 .
9·14·3tc
2813 after 5 p.m. ·
9· 12 ·3tc
DIET SAIP... .----.
....!!:r:'..~.d~y . and Tuesda~· 14 · 2tc ____ .:..,._...l..-:--------··- 9·1&lt; ·31D
1L
1949 'WILL.:YS Jeep. good ~
1
• ..., :. ,.
,1 • - .--: - ,...-------- -running condition . Complete NEW EARLY American sota, 6 MONTH Old Holstein bull.
~ LAST WEEK for yard sale . · with top large tires and set gold and wh lie floral design, ·Also , 6 month old Jersey
Ld'IIJI D
Now arran~re the circled tetrdS ' : Clol-!'l\ng, d i sh~s, II: pri~e ,
of new chains, SSOO . Donald
90 in . long, ,$175. 2 pieces of
bull , both can be registered.
i
furniture. J wn,te lavatones
Pooler. Chester, Ohio .
No . 4 ol electrical cable. 20
.Phone 992 2264 .
.
to form the 1urpr ae anawer, 88 ·
$3 each , truck ·car cha in,
Phone 1614 , 985 . 38 97 .
ft and 25 fl . Phone 992-2779.
.
_ ._ .
_
.
surrested by the above cartoon.
Kenrnore washer with sud
9. J4 .Jtc
9.1ntc
:'¥' )" '
saver. Sunbeam coffee poth, - - - - - -- - - - -- - -~---------...!.--13., FT . FLEETWING troller,.
!'love. icel;lox , commodej
~b
Hoawmls
i
l,to~·
h
~,f:c~n~~~~s~~~
FOR SAL E OR TRADE, 1971 STER:EO·RAOIO. modern
- - - - ,12
Vega, e~tra nice . radial
sink, spare tires. Used 3
design
,
a
track!
tape,
am
.fm
1
•
each, sizePhone
16. black742
yarn,
t ·, res. Also, a 1949 Ford
limes, like new . $725 " or
(An•wer• tomorrow)
pr,·ce
·6273 .
• ,
radio combination. Balance
,
Ptckup, sharp , $450. Phone
l.rade for aft truck camper.
$102.59, or terms . Call 992 .
Jun•hlr•; DRAWL ' JUDGE SHOULD TOUCHY
County R:d 10 from L.angs
992 3259
Phone 992 ·7106
3965.
I
vii i ~. 1 1 mile .
9 14 .6t c
9 14.Jtc
Y·Y-tfc
9·9.1fc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

7:... 'l'Jie ueuy ..enune,,

' nJ~ ""'4&lt;;\'

MIUWpul.,...,...._.,,_v., moolllly, ::il!p1. ta, 11115

..~-._.~.-~~~~~_..__._.~-.~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~._~~.._---.,w~~~~-~~~~~~~"'"'~~

Television log· for easy viewing

EmplOyment Wanted

-B usiness Services

Dan's Shoe Repair

FJtEE ESTIMATES

MONDA'i' LSEPTEMIER IS,lt7~
~:30-,-Bewltched

3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family I;
Get Smart 15.
S:OO-a-111 3; Family Affair 1: Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5: 30-Adem-12 •: News 6; Bev..-y Hillbillies I;
Adem'l2 13; El«. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3,.4.1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Spec:lel Education 33.
6:30-NBC Newa3A, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 1,10.
7:00-TruthorCons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Bowling for
Oollers 6r Buek Owons I ; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Men Builds, Man Destroys
20; No-Honest.l y 33 ..
7:30-That Good Ole Nalhvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test~; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht 8;
Evening Edl~lon with Martin Agronoky 20; To Tell
the Trutli 13; Untamed World 15; Marco Sportllte :
FootbaltJ:!.

U.S. COINS

For Rent

LARRY LAVENDEI{

Dan's Shoe Repair

II

POME~!! E~~.~~~ co.@

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED

'(OU WIL~·EA!PY­

WITH WA!&gt;H A$
YOUR COPILOT!

SMITH NELSON
MOIORS, INC.

First -

L.ISml.'W,

WEST
62

llllS IS

•

•

'PJ'V£3
Hf3W ME
UP!

97

R

Shops .the

Pus

L--------.J
By Otwald &amp; James Jaeoby
Oswald : "The American
Bridge Teacher's quarterly is
always a fine source for bandl
used by teachers to illuatrate
points of play ."
Jim: "They are almost
always very simple and
straight forward, so that even
beginners can underBtand and
follow them."
Oswald: "Today's hand is
described by Paul Boardman. It
is an exercise in not drawing
trumps."
Jim : "Paul pointa out a
t111mp or diamond lead would

ALlEY OOP
W...O TH' HIOCJ( IS
THAT BIG DUDE?

BUSINESS HAS JUST ABOUT II.E·
TURNED 10 NORMAL SIWCE WE
CUT OUT THE ENTERTAIWMENT!

HE AIN'T NO DUDE,
BOSSI THAT'S BIG
JOHN, TH' PROSPECTOR!

&lt;

E.

Z3Klndof
shock

...

G,,. • UG'"'

I ()

I "'

·.
r -

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~
. [ X I I I ) o·-( I
I

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--------------.

I

1

- ~ ------ -- ----

DEPEN~BLE

NAME-FOLI&lt;S'LL
E:Xpea&lt; Yd TO
PLAYll-i' GAME-

I

lJ
,.11

•••

served.

zs Son of

For T~, Sept. 1t, 1171

u-

)
.

I

32 Mary -

,," .

Williams

~n
b:~:oo
·

sash
'35 Roman
weight
unlls

L~o;!_,~9;:!c;::a::!t'::JI-::::_q:!;!;'":.::: Z7 Gaelic
poem
,. Twine

50 INTERE5TINC7 5C\'Ni'&lt;)NES NO/-ING_I_N'""'-

arr THERE

'IOU'VE B~ GLUED

iO THE HOUSE NEXT
DOOR. I'M. TRYING 1D

10THATWINDOW
RJR AN HOUR .

c;iETAGANDERATOUR

RIP ?

3t Price paid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wor

NEW NEIGHBOR&amp;.

II

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·-,

., .

,.

,..

:

A X Y D L BAA X 1t
L 0 N GF B L L 0 W

CRYPTOQUOTE
GJ I

KJT' L

YJW

HJNR

SJDR

THEY'RE

BLA5TUV' ANOTHER

OAOBURN HIGHWAif OVER TH'

MOIJ(I)TAll\1, MIZ LEDBETTER·-

NO--I:

IT TREMBLES

SHORE
DIDN'T,

All 1H'TIME

OPNR
BORT

LJ
ML

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MF

siderably.

B0 RWR

YWJD.-BRWTRW

G J l

RWOPWK.

ALL DISEASES IS DIAGNOSIS. -

DR.

KAJU- KRAUS

HOW DIO I{OV COME OVT ?
DID 1{01/ PI.N( WEU.?

DIDN'T 'IE HEARTH' AIRTH
TREMBLE THIS MORN!(\)'?

'

y 0 ur
s·I rthday

alert loday. Something unique
_,
8
Is developing thai will make Th
jjt; 168' 1975
general 1m1
what you're working on unere w
e
.
usualty profitable.
prov~ment lh rs commg year In
condttlons contnbullng to your
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cL 23) Your malarial security. Be prudent.
tact and graciousness today Set aside a lit11e surplus you'll
will enable V'lU to manage a be accumulating .

OVER HERE

LOWEEZV

SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 22)
You'll be getting something
that has small value to another ,
yet II will be ol considerable
worth to you It's likely to come
secretly.
IAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Through 8 conversation
with a friend today, lnfC?rmation
will be disclosed to Ign ite a
bnghl plan and embark you on
a new venture
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen.
11) Situations relattng to your
career and financial prospects
are very encouragmg today . If
you have an ace In lhe hole,
play II.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
You're at your best today It
confronted by a challenge.
Success 1s likely in whalever
you put your m ind to .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2f)
Something you 're presently in valved 1n will turn out to be of
far more benefil lo you lhan il
appeared on the surface .

ARIEl (11.,.,., 21 · Aprll18) Try
10 break away from roullne loday. Do something new and
lmaglnallva you've ~een think ~
lng about. but haven I yet tried .
TAURUS (April 20-ller 20)
Your chances of success are
very good now. Your emblllons
are in harmony with your
desires Go after what you
want.
QEIIINI (Mar 21-June 20)
You'll do well In any situation
today where you'll be able to
express yourself crQatlvely. Put
your talent to a profitable use.
CANCER (June 21-Jul}' 22)
The liming Is now right to make
changes you've be8n contemplating that could benefit
your family. Begtn today.
LEO
(.lui}'
23-Aug.
22)
Because you ' re willing to
cooperate today, someone Is
going lo go a low exira slops •
for you, to ptease you con-

H J J A M T E , VI ROO (Aug. 2:1-Sepl. 22) Be

• \'etterday'l Qypls...U: ONE OF THE MOBr COMMON OF

-- ---~ ----- - --

,,

k It

One letter aimply Jlanda for another. ln thia sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters,
apootrophes, the lencth and formation of lhe words are all
biDts. Each day the eode letters are different.

'

•'

delicate situation In a way so
that everyone's Interests will be

COV\PAI'JY~AH - ApMhnKihlte
~ •• oons
GO'Irr ••
"J"
drwn

--------------

'

1:00-- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

r-,-T-H_'_a.J
.........L:..Y........,.._ 27 =d~r

-IF 'Ki GOT'TH'

. . ..-. ....,_J

I.J

of~.....,;-~tree-r.-~

5:00-Bonanza 3; Family Affair S; Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30--Adem-12 ~; Beverly Hillbillies S; News 6 ; Adam ·
12 13; E lee. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3, •• 8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Jody's Body Shop 33.
6:30-NBC lllews 3.~.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Name That Tune 13;
News 10; Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Jean
Shepherd's America 33.
7: »-Hollywood Squares 3,~; Let's Deal Wl1h II 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell the Trulh
13; Wally's Workshop 15; Scene One, Take One 33.
8 :DO-Movln' On 3,~. 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8,10; When Television Was Live 20,33.
8 :30-Welcome Back, Koller 6,13·; Joe and Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.33.
9:00-Pollce Story 3.~. 15; Rookies 6, 13; Switch 8, 10;
Nova 20,33
10:00-Joe Forrester 3.~.. 15; Marcus Welby, M .D. 6, 13;
Beachon Hill 8. 10; News 20; Interface 33.
10:30--Woman 20.33.
11 :00-News 3.~.6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Banacek 8; Movie "China Seas" 10; Janak!
33.
12:3~Wide Worl&lt;' Mystery 6.

· dam

___________

--------------

(Do you have a question lor
lhe Jacobys? Write "Ask the
Jacobys" care ol lhi~
newspaper. The most interesting questions will be
used m ·this column and
writers will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

~In~~~

.,,.-,_. ~.

f

if dwnmy is void?
The answer to this one is to
play ace and then queen. ~n
case one opponent held K x z x
and bis partner J x, this will
pick up the jaek and get you out
with the loss of just one trump
trick .

7: 30-Schoolles 1D.
8 :00-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo S,10; Sesame St.
33.
8:30--Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue~. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J . 13.
9 : 30--Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs B; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:00--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.•. IS; Dinah 6; Glve.N Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,~. 15; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie ~;
Gambit 8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,1S; Happy Days 13;
Midday ~; Love of Ute 8, 10.
11 :5s--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:110--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, IS; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's S0-50 Club ~; News 6,1, 10.
12:30-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:55-NBC News 3.
1 :00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Days of Our Lives 3.~. 15; Lers Make a Deal 6.13.
2:00--$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8, 10; Nova
20.
2:30-Doclors 3,4;15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
3:00-Another World 3.~ .. 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattlet~les
8, 10; Romagnoli•' Table 20.
~:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin ~; Somerset 1S;
Mickey Mouse Club 6; 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Klssln' Cousins" 100; Dinah 13.
~:30--Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Get Smart 15.

ZO Ancient
Pef8ian

----- ---------

r:( . ., .. "\

trumps

6:00--Columbus Today ~; Summer Semester 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:30-New Zt&gt;o Revue ~; News 6; Bible Answer&gt; 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson
13.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-&lt;huck White Repom 10; News 13.

%5 Gave a

Auto Sales

I VABER

how do you play your

DOWN
prison
13 "- Butter- 1 Malllre
%Greek
fly"
marketplace
14 Simple
3 Move
Simon met
Yesterday'• Aarwer
quickly
him(2 wda.)
( 4 wds.)
10 Backed
24 Valiant lady
15 Sea eagle
out ol
25 French
16 Barbara- 4 Be mistaken
5 Attach
a deal
statesman
Geddes
16 Dance
Z7 Tllt
17 Relative of f Claw
11
7 Italian
festival
30 Moderate
&amp;utomne"
three
19 Punctures 31 Ship
18 Hale
a Returning
zo MUan's
33 Tempo
zo Drink
( 2 wds.)
La 36 - session
greedily
t Superlative Z3 Got scent 37 Philippine
%1 Grasp
2Z Grotto

Miqht be a bless in'!
Make it easier t' qit th'
rope aroun'!

For Sale

;;~t~

tract,

by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
40 BeCIIIIIe
1 Fad; craze
complex
S Flower part 41 European
11 Stravinsky
river
1% Way out of

Yard Sale

~1]1WI :~lli!J;-Iki

A reader from Connecticut
A Q 10 9 &amp; 4
and are in a four-spade con-

aw if you hold •

tlt)lf• ~-,t

fhe

~

6•

Pass
Opening lead - J •

Wanted To Buy

U!,.ttl£~1

Eul

queen."

Real Estate for Sale

Sale

North

Wnt

Wanted

Mobile Homes

- . "East has to take bls ace and
must either allow South to ruff
in dummy and discard a diamond or lead away from his
king up to dummy's ace-

8oth vulnerable

WANT AD WAY

Local Bowling

spade."

.,~

.... 732

TEAFORD
... " '

QJ 108

tKJ8

.KQ16
SOtrrll
6KQ10843

'

•. '

9"1(

6J109~~

'TI~ THIS
I,-ICtJll.l

Notice

..

EAST

a~ 2
eiOB2

THE' -miRD

-·-· -- --- -----~ -.

Pets

·- ....
e AQ71

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

1111D South' s party, but lbe actual lead wu lbe jack of clubs.
This enables South to make lbe
hand by lbe simple expedient of
crou-rufflnc out lbe hearta and
clubs and finally throwing Eut
In wllh his ace of trumps. The
line of play is to win the first
trick with lbe ace of clubs while
discarding a heart from dummy . Ruff a club; casb ace of
hearts, cross ruff the rest of the
hearts and clubs and lead a

15

6H765
9 At 53

BORN I,DSE:~--'----.,

TUESDAY,SEPcEMBER16, 1975

Don't draw trumpsl

NORnt

The Daily Sentinel

NOW HIRING

Jeanne

WIN AT BRIDGE

Ml
PENNZOIL

Help Wanted

r

INPGSPf AWD
WHO'LL PILOT
rr, ~UH 'f

8:00-Bobby VInton 3; Barbary Coast 6.13; Invisible
Man 4, 15; Gunsmoke 8; About Charles lves 20,33;
Rhoda 10.
1:30-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
9 :oo-Movle "The April Fools" 3,4, 15; College Football
6,13; All In the Family I, 10.
9: »--J.\audel, 10; ·
Wolf With . . . 20; Boardl ng
House 33 .
1P:oo-Medlcal Center 8,10; News 20; Session 33.
10 :30--Earthkeepli\q 33.
11 :00-News 3,.,8,10, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Movie "night of Terror"
8; Movie "Bod Bascomb" 10; Janakl 33.
12:00-News 6,13.
12:3~FBI 6; Untouchables 13.
1:(»--Tomorrow 3,•.
1 :30--News 13.

I

�,.

6 _The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept. IS. 1975

Alfred ·.
Social Notes

NOBT~C~u"eoL~~.N't~·~CE, ~ .. EJ ~TO Herman Gillilan , Glady s -L' 0
Cozart, Chatmer Gi llilan , and

r

.

v
....
t
.L' as

R es ults use The Sentinel Classifieas
I

·
the un kn ow n h eirs , dev1sees
a nd next of kin of Wesley G .
Gil hlan . .=~11 o t whose pla ces o f
f ~~--------------------------~
Sunday ·s chool attendance
reside n ce arc vnk.nown and
_ At.!P ENTRY . !lo u r in g
c anno t
with
reasonable
on Sept. 7, was 44, the offering
1gence bC ascerlained
cei lin g and p&lt;;l n e linq Pllonc
$26 .62 . Dinner and table dilYo
99') ?IS.lf
u are hereby not1f1cd that
8 I? ?6 tc
you
have
bee n
nam e d
commi ttees were appointed
de fendan ts 1n a legal ac llon
for the homecoming on Sept.
e n! il led Mt ld red G1l l11an.
' REMODELING,
Plumbing .
l\dm,ni s tratr 1x of the E s talr&gt;
heat 1ng and all types of
2!.
of
We s ley
G
G1l l11&lt;1n.
gen~ r al
r e pair .
Work
Worship services were held
deceased.
Plai n 1d t. . vs
g uarant eed 20 yea r s ex:
WANTED TO &amp;UY
Blown
Lawrence G•llilan . ('1 al.
penen cc
Phone 992 2409
at 11 a.m., with Charles D.
Middleoort,
0
.
318
N.
2nd
WILL
PAY
5
1
If,...
Defendants This act 1on has
Insulation Services
1971 OLDS CUTLASS"S" CPE
5239l
Woode, leading and Duan.e
t:le e n ass,g ne d Case No 71.371.
.
for
1964 and older
26
Blown into Walls &amp; AHics
"S" Cpe., grey fmish. blk . tntenor . bucket seats &amp;
'"bber In
and 1S pendmg 1n the Court of
Sydensll'icker speaking from
dfmes .
.
STORM
console. radio. tape. au tomatrc. power steering &amp;
. 65 for 1964 and older
Common P leas.
Prob ate
Ephesians
4'22-32.
AtTEXAS WESTERN
WINDOWS&amp; DOORS
01\IISIOn . Of Me rq s CounTy .
quarters
.
brak es . local 1 owner .car
MODERN 4 rm house in
REPLACEMENT
s1. 30 for 1964 and o lder
tendance was 25, offering
Pome roy . Oh 1o . 45769
BOOTS
Pomeroy
Full
basement
The obj ec t of the compla1nt
WINDOWS
halves .
$20.00. Pledges $72.00
w rth garag e. re f erences.
1972 COMET2 DR.
51S50
•s tor auth onty to set I th e r ca t
KNAPP
SHOES
SJ 4o for 1935 and ol der
ALUMINUM
please
Write
Box
729L.
co
es tate ot the decedent ro pay
Prayer services will be
6 cy l std . trans, radto , ltk e new W · W It res. blue fintsh.
dollars
SHEBOYGAN
SIDING.oSOF FITT
The
Da11y
Sen t 1ne 1.
th e debts and cos ts of ad
- - - - FOR SALE---m ce car wtth good economy
GUTTE
RS.
AWNING&lt;
Pomeroy
,
Ohio
457
69
held on Wednesday eveni ng
m1n1stering hrs esta te, wh1c h
Steel
~oe Safely Shoes
WHEAT BACK PENNIES
9·14 6tp
at 7:45 with Vernon Nease
r e~1 1
es tate rs descr1bed us
.85 A ROLL
51495
1971 MATADOR
fol lows
BUFFALO NICKELS S7.00
4 BEDRM upstairs and ba th,
from Syracuse, speaking on
Syracuse. Ohio
Twenty four (1·1! acres off
11·door. local car. air conditioned, full euipment
A ROLL
6 rm s
downsta
rrs
,
new
Ph . 9'92 -39U
the Evangelistic
thrust
the eas1 e nd o f t11 e fotlowrng
SILVER CERTIFICATES
k1lchen on Rl 3), Mason , W
9·2·1 mo.
4 10 1 mo .
real
estate,
to
w
1t
r ar t y
51.25 EACH
va
,
natural
gas,
elec
,
city
throughout the county.
acrPs of lan d out of th f' wes t
n .oo Bills- 13 .25 each.
water Phone 1 304 -773 ·51.'7,
ha lf Ol LO I NO 171:.! 1n Set110n
The Orange Christian
u .oo Gold coin$ X F cond .
a
....
ailab
le
17th
of
Se
pt.
2. Townsh1p '} , and R anqe 12 1n
US .OO
9 14 101c
Church will have its annual
the 011 10 Company 's Purct1aseCALL 742·3651
homecoming on Sunday.
in Leta r t TownShip , Me 1ys
Jlutland - Rager Wam5ley
F
URNI
SHED
apt.
3
rooms
County , Ohro , sa rd JO acre lot
Sept. 14, with the us ual
and balh, u tilrl 1es pa rd
bemq m th e north pa r 1 of the
Phone 992 2937
POMEROY, OH10 - - - -----'
morning serv1ces and a west hall of the 160 acre lot
9 12 6lc
abo\ie mc n troncd , a ruJ bernq
basket dinner at n oon, and a
the sa me p roperty conve yed
B RM MODERN home , 7
singing program, beginning
by Nancy Prcke ns. c r ~1 1 , to
WANT ADS
Your Heil Dealer
miles from Harr~ son v 1 lle
From the largest Truck or
Josep
h
MMI1n
P1
c
ke
ns
by
INFORMATION
at 1:30 p .m . Singers are lflThird
St
Racine, Ohio
Shown
by
appoin1ment
only
Bulldozer Radiator to the
dee d dated March 24 , 1?37, •"ln d
DEADLINES
Phone 992.9973
Ph . 949-59'61
Phone f5 131 839 4126
S')all est Heater Core
vited.
re co rd e d In Book 140,' clt 'Pa ge S'
M
Day Be fore Pub
9.
J2
.6tc
North
2nd Street
~'V I of thf' Deed ~ecords of r!' lJt&gt;alion
The U.M.W. of the Alfred , . Me1gs
Emergency
Nathan
B1ggs
Tune.Ups
- Batteries
Co unty, Oh 10, excePI 111 J! 14fl,onday Deadline 9 a m
949-2211 or 992 -5700
R ildiator Spectaltst
Church will have their
tour- Atre s off th e west side
Can cc ll al10n
Correcf1ons
Shock
Absorbers
· Tires COUNTRY Mob 1le Home
Co mple te a•r cond itio ning
thereof . conve ye d by Joseph Wi ll be accep ted until 9 am
Pa rk , Rl )) ten mrl es north
regular meeting on Tuesday
Muffler.
Tailpipes
.
Cooling
sa
te
s
and
serv1ce,
hea
ting
.
Mart1n P rck.c n s ro E l va for Day of Publi ca t. on
ot Pom eroy La rg e lo ts w1th
plumbi
ng
,
roofing
and
Systems.
evening, Sept. 16, at 8:00 in
P 1c kens Vari a n and Robert P
REGULATIONS
concre te paliO!r ; Si d ewalks,
general sheef mela l work
V&lt;H ra n by deed dated Mar c h
Thl'" P ub li s her reser..,.es the
We
a I so
service
runner s and o ff s tr ee t
the church basement, with
Free Estimates
25 1937 and r eco rd ed 1n Book rig hT to ed1t or r etect any ads
~ a rk.1n g
Phon e 997 7479
Volkswagens
and
othe,
Pomeroy
9
14
I
mo
Ph. 992 -2114
Thelma Henderson program
1.1 2. at PagP 33 7 of the Deed d ~emed
objectional
Th e
17 3 1 tfc
L1
NCOLN
HILL
foreign
cars.
Record s. leav•ng
twenty publ iS her
w•ll
not
be
leader and Emma Finch as
Wilbur Ward,
acre s conveyed her eby
r esponsrb le lor more than one
POMEROY
LAURELAND APARTMENT SE P T IC T ANK S cle aned
EX(AVA T !NG', doz er. loader
hostess. The prog ram s ubject
Deed Re ference
Volu me 1ncorrec 1 rn se rt 10n
Mgr.
&amp; Mechanic
61h a nd George Sts., New
and backhoe work , sep t rc
Modern Sanitat1on 992 395
162 . Page &lt;1&lt;19 , Me 1g s County
RATES
is "Are You Retired?"
Haven ,
w
Va .
IM
8·21 ·1 mo.
ta
nk
s
1nstalled
.
dump
Contact
or 992 7349
Deed Recor ds
For Wan I Ad Serv•ce
MEDIATE OCCUPA NCY
truc ks and to boys tor hire ,
Everyone welcome .
9
1a
lf
c
Yo u are rcqur r Cd to answer 5 cents pe r Word one 1n ser t1on
Se lect your 2 bedrm . town
w ill l'lau! til l d 1r t. to p so11 , €XCAV.A:TING ,
backhoe ,
the compla.nt w ithin 28 days
Mm1mum Cha r ge $1 00
The annual homecoming of
house,
Beautiful new apt
lrmestone and gravel., Ca ll
dozer
and
dilcher
. Gas,
after th e tast p ublrca t.on of
14 cents pe r word three
BACK
HOE
to
r
rent
,
hour
or
complex , appl•ances fur
Bo b or Roger Je ff er5, day
the Alfred U .M . Church will
electr•c and water lin'e
thi s notice , w h1c h wi ll be co nsec ulrvc inse rt 1ons
contract
Reg
or ex
nis
h
ed,
comple
t
ely
car
phone 992 7089, n1gh t phone
burial , basements, footers ,
publrshed on ce each wee k for
26 cents pe r word SIX co n
cevat ing type Sept•c tanks
be held on Sunday , Sept. 21,
pe led, Rent $ 128 up •n ·
992 3525 or 992 5232 .
992-2156
sepl!c
systems and brl;Jsh
s 1x s uccess •ve weeks The last secut •ve 1n sert: o ns
.
l.nstalled
Btl!
Pullins
Phon
e
elu d ing
util itie s
Ca ll
2 ll .tfc
with the usual forenoon
cleaning Will haul till d1rt ,
publr ca tron w ill be made on
25 Pe r Cent D1s c.ounl on pa•d
,9-9 2 2478
res1dent
manager,
Sam
or
top soil, sand and gravel.
Sep tembe r 29. 1975 , and lhe 28 ads and ads pa1d wdt11n 10
8-27 ffc
services. A basket dinner at
Becky Longanacre . 1 304
BEAUTY operator With Oh1 0
days for answer will com days
limesto
ne for dr iveways and
S
EWING
MACHINE,
882 2567 II n o answer , ca ll 1
noon. Afternoon program at
Lrcen se . Phone 992 3205 .
CARD OF THANKS
road s. Phone Charles R
mence on th at da l e .
Repltirs , se rv ice , all makes
(
J04)
882
2768
.
9 14 Jtp
Hatfield , Backhoe Service ,
In case of your failu re to
&amp; Ob•luary
992 2284 Th e F,abric:., Shop .
1:30 featuring the MI. Zion
9 3 12tc
$2 00 for 50 word min1mum
Rl. 1, Rutland , OhiO , 742
a n swer or otherwise r espond
Pom e roy Auth orfz ed Singe r
Ladies Trio, from Mineral · as requ•red by th e Ohio Rules
6092
Each add it ion al word 3c .
Sales and Se rv 1c e We
.4
ROOM
furnished
apartmen1
o f Crvd Pr ocedu re , judgment
7·11 ·901c
BLIND ADS
sha rpen Sc issors
Wells , W. Va . and local and
w1th wall to wal• carpet. ONE used cornet in good
Add itional 25c Charge per
b y default wrll be render~d
l
29
lfc
Phone 992 ·5908
shape 540 Phon e 992 ·5786. visiting singing g roups .
against you for the rel1ef Adver l• seme nl
WOULD YOU BELIEVE?
9 3 tfc
9· 10·6tc
de
ma
nd
ed
in
the
comp
la
int
OFFICE
HOURS
Build an all steel building at
Welcome to alL
-E LWOOD BOWER S 1-H:PAIR
8 30a m . to 5 OOp m Daily ,
Po le Barn pr ices? Golden
Swee
pers
,
toaste
rs
,
•ron!.
,
RM
FURN
ISHED
ap
l
for
4
CLARINET.
good
c
nndition
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Manning D Websler . B· JO am
to 12 00 Noon
G1an l A!I ·Sfe&amp;l Buildings ,
all small appliances Law n
12 good men needed.
re nt. Phone 992 365a
Reasonable Phone 949 .4114
Ju dge a n d Ex off• c •o Satu rday
Rt 4, Box 1.48, Waverly .
Henderson and Mr . and Mrs.
mower
,
next
to
Stat
e
High
9
3
t fc
9 15 5tc
Clerk of the Common
Ohio . Phone 947 2296
way
Ga
ra
ge
on
Route
7$140.00
a
week
full
Clair Follrod, Steve and
Pl eas Cou rt ,
7 24 lfc
Phone 985 3825
Probate Div• s•on
3 fi ND 4 ROOM furni sh ed and REDUCE sa te and fast with
Kathy attended the Harpe r
4
16
th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E .V,ap
time. $84.00 a week
Meigs County, Oh 1o
unfurnished
apartments
" water pills ," Nel son Drug
Family Reunion at Wilson
WILL TRIM or cut trees and
Phone 99? 5113·1
Room and Board
[f!l
25.
r9J
2.
a,
15.
22.
29.
6tc
'READY MIX CONCRETF.:
9 15 ·1tp
4
1?
He
s hrubbery Phone 949 322 1
Park, Sunday, Sept. 7, near
ROOM AND BOARD tor
part
time
.
Must
have
del•"ered r rg ht to you r
or 742 ·4441.
senior
c
it
ize
ns
Low
rn
come
STA RCRAFT Trailers and
Carthage Gap .
prot ec t . Fast and easy. Free
9·7 24tc:
l1v1ng. very nr ce Phone 992
Fo
ld
downs
,
1975
Galaxte
2 BEDRM . mobile home, air
es t 1ma tes Phone 992 ·3284,
NOTICE OF
Sunday afternoon visitors
35 09
car. Call 446 -0677, 9 til
$2 , 139 - Starmast er 51.729
cond il ion1ng , Racine area .
Goeg l e~n
Ready Mtx Co .
APPOINTMENT
8 2J 26tc
of Clara Follrod and Nina
.~ XL Deluxe, 51,375 . Camp
Phon e 992 5858 .
PORTABLE
TOILET
Middleport, Ohio
Case No . 21612
5.
9 3 tfc
Conley Starcrafl Sales, Rt .
RENTAL ,
Co nsfru clion
6 30 ttC
Robinson were Mr . and Mrs . E~tate of Mary M . Beard PARASOL
boutique
an
62 N Poinr Pleasant
Out door eve n ts
Phone
Dec ease d.
nounces new hours Open
Allen Follrod and Mr. and
9· 155tc D &amp; D TREE Trimmt ng . 10
Galli p o li s,
446 47a2,
ROOMS an d bath un
NotiCe is hereby given that
Tuesday through Sa turda y,
Russe ll 's Plumbing and
Frank W Port e r , Jr ., of R D
furnished house. 1650 Lin · -~--~~~------, years experie n ce In su red ,
Mrs . Frank Follrod of MI.
Sept Sp ec1al ~ Permanents COUPLE wtfhout pre..,.ious
Heat 1ng
coin Ht s Phone 992 .3874 .
rfr ee es timat es . Cal! 992 ·3057,
Racine. Oh 10 (mailm g addre ss
Reg S17 50 n ow $15. We also
Sterling, Ohio and Mr . and P 0 . Box 486 , Pomeroy , Oh10)
8 19 t fc
Stegler &amp; Monogram
9 5·1fC
Coolvtlle Ph one 11) ~667
busine ss experience , bu t
do
blow c uts and blow
304 1
wil
l1ng
to
work
and
learn
Mrs. Dana Aleshire of has been duly appo 1nled
dry mg
Phon e (6 14) 985
Executor of the Last Will and
4 30 lfc
together pleasa nt profitable LASALLE HOTEL. MID
4141
Operator, San dra
FUEL OIL
Worthington, 0.
Tes tament of Mary M Beard ,
work
Contact
Amway
DLEPORT.
OHIO
.
ROOMS
Kerns, and Helen Newland
Dis tr ibutors Pnone ( 1I. 989
Mr. and Mrs . Clair Woode de ceased, late of Meigs
$5 UP SPEC IAL RATE S
9 10 12tc
WORK , Excavat ing,
County , Ohio .
2353 for •ntervtew
Heating Stoves DOZER
BY WEEK OR MONTH
and Conni of Circleville, 0.,
land clearing , ponds and
Credtfor s are r equired to
9 11 4tC
TV AIR CONDITIONING
basemen ts,
and
land ·
Virgil B., Sr.
All sizes on hand, prices
called on the William Carr file their cla im s wilh said PIANO Tuning , Lan e Da nfels,
8· 26 · 26tc
scap1ng
Pullins
Ex .
Phone 992 ·2082 .
fiduci a ry withm four months.
start at $324.69.
family Friday evening and
cavat in g , p hone 992 2478
Da ted th1s 10th day ol
8-2a-26tp
-1 Wood Burning Stove
"l=URNISHED
apartment .
8 26 .30tc:
the Robert White family Septe mbe r 1975.
PEACOCKS. all ages. si ngl e
CLIP THIS AD and bring it
adults only "' Middleport
Friday night and Saturday
or pair, $6 to $25 eac h P 0
Phone 99:1 J87~.
Mann•nQ D Webster
in. for Sl5.00 discount.
REALfOR
Box 256, Cool..,.ille, or phone
3 25 tfc
Judge
'
morning while Sue assisted
{614)
667
3358
Court of Common Pleas ,
POMEROY LANDMARK
there, Saturday afternoon
; 1
'', • I I r
()
~VERYBODY
Probat e Div1sion
ROOMS and bath apt in
Meigs
County
,
Ohio
.....
~ack
W.
carsey,
Mgr.
Clair and Conni spent the
Rutland area Phone 992
DACH S HUND pupptes, 2
Phone 992-2181
5858 .
NEW LISTING- 40 acres
afternoon with Mr . and Mrs. (91 15. 22. 29. 3tc
males. and 2 females , red 6
7 27 tic
HOU S E tor sale In Rutland ,
with
timber. Some sites for
Charles D . Woode and
weeks
old
.
Phone
742
4256
.
$6 ,500. Phone 992 5a58 .
t
building
. Want Sl2,000 .
9.
l-4
·3tc
8·31
·ttc
2 BEDRM traile r , S27 per GUNS and Ammo. Our fall
assisted there Saturday
week
Atl
-utilities
paid
.
stock
is
now
here
5
BEDROOMSLike new
evening , they visited the
TO GIVE AWAY - Me1gs
Phon e 992 ·3324
Complete line of Rem . 4 RM HOUSE and bath on 3
with
lots
of
large
closets .
County Humane Society
9.7.tfc
•nglon,
W i nchester ,
William Ohlinger home at
acres
on
hard
to
p
road
.
Has
J
full
baths,
central
air
desperately need home for 7
POr~EROY LANES
llhica. Savage. Slug barrels
Phone 742 3633
Pomeroy.
mixed breed pupp ies. 6 or 7
Monday Bend League
and
heat,
therm
·o.
pane
in
stock
for
most
brand
shot
.
9 14 3tc
months old . Will not be large 2 BEDROOM trailer , e~ttra
Mrs . Genevieve Guthrie
9'-8-75
guns, but •n short supply .
windows, sun deck. and 2
ntce
Phone
992
·332
4
dog s, genlle . healthy and
PTS.
G.et them while they last
returned Sunday evening
car garage. $47,500.
8
26
tic
clean Ideal for house pets .
Red Ra1d e rs
16 .c'A~ H pa1d for all makes ana
Money short. lay .a .way
2 BEDROOMS Oak
models
of
mo
b
ile
homes
.
Call
949
4917
or
992
·5906
Cre
w
's
Comets
14
from a weekend in Columbus
your fall hunting needs. New
Phone area code 614 423 ·
after 12 ntlon .
2
Red
Devils
8
BEDROOM
furnished
Fall
store
hours
starting
floors,
F.A.
furnace,
city
and Sugar Grove, 0. She
'9531
mo bile hom e No pets Call
Screw Offs
8
Se pt . 5. 10 a m to 9 p .m ,
water,
basement,
and
a
992 7479 .
reports the O'Brien's getting
Wonders
0
~ ~--~- --- -~~-4 13 lie
Monday Saturday. Village
fenced
yard.
Asking
--~
-----~
AKC
Reg.
English
Springer,
3
Odd Balls
/J
8·22 tfc
Gun Shoppe , 266 Mill St ,
along very well, and Mrs.
month p~ps , brown and
$10,000.'
H!qh individual qame - R
Phone 992 5177, financ ing
wh 1te. Phone 992 ·2639
Yost improving from a recent Glasgow , 202 Second high
available.
ON 33 NORTH
2
space for rent in
individual game - J Cline,
9.9 6tp TRAILER
9-3·26fc
fall in the hospital , and ex- 20
Middleport
Phone
992
5434
bedrooms
,
really
nice
with
I
.,LO turn.ture.~ ice boxes ,
8-29 ·26tc
paneling, and wall to wall
pecting to go home in a few
High series ~ R Glasgow ,
brass bed s, or complete
ONE SIGLER gas heate r ,
MAIN
527
.
Second
hig
h
se
ries
c
households
.
Wrffe
M
o,
~or
carpeting.
Garage and
days. Her granddaughter Matthews , 524 .
NEW
VILLAGE
Manor
73,000 BTU 14, 000 BTU air
Miller , Rt . 4, Pometoy,
large
lot.
$16,000.
PoMEROY,O
YOU CAN save several hum..
Apartments in Middleport. 1
conditioner . $100 . Phone
Beth Yost Cadinee is leaving
Team high game ~ Red
Ohio Call 992 ·7760
WATER FRONT- 6 room
red dollars at Kingsbury
bedroom apts from $104 plus
(3041 882.3219
Devils
,
900
Team
high
se
ries
10
·7·74
to join her husband in GerA MILLION SSS VIEW- 3
Homes Sales this week , On a
elec Call 992 ·3273 or see
9 10.6fc
Red Devils, 2418 .
house with level building
- ------~- -- --12 , 14 ft wide or double
Mrs . Keetley. Apt . 101 ,
nice bedrooms with closets,
many for three years.
lot . A good buy for $28 ,500.
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
I TO 5 acres of land in Me •gs
w ide Come in to 1100 East
Riverside Apartments.
lovely bath with bui II in
INTERNATIONAL
Early Sunday
Co . Phone 742 ·4256
NEAT 2 BRS StoveMain Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
S-2B-26tp 1965
Travel All VB , et andard
Alinanac
Mixed League
lavatory. the dining R
9 14 Jtc
or call 992 7034
refrigeratar
.freezer,
shift, air conditioneC, tinted
Sept. 7.1'1'75
~ - - ------- - ~ - 9·14 ·6t c TWO Furnished apts Kay
makes every meal a
By
United
Press
Incarpeting in kit, lug., and
glass . Call 992 2622 after 5
Sta ndings - Tom 'S Carry
special
occasion. Sparkling
Cecil.
a7
South
Second
Ave,
P
m.
ternational
Out, Jack's Dairy Bar , Team
bath. Nice varnished floors
Middleport, Ohio Phon e
1974 CASTLE 12 x 65 2 bedrm ,
9 9 .6tc
spotless oak floors, a full
No . 3, F'uiHns Excavatmg,
in bedrooms. $13,SOO.
Today is Monday, Sept. 15,
992
5262
2 full baths. to tal elec
Hdl &amp; Mayer Barbers. Team YARD SALE. Se pt 18, 19. and
MOBILE HOME
3
a 21 tfc CANNING tomatoes, green basement with utility space
furn iture , washer
and
the 258th day of 1975 with 107
No . 6.
and recreation space,
20 9 a m till 4 p m Walter
dryer.
Phone
949
·3655.
bedrooms.
cook
and
bake
H1gh
ind
ivi
dual
game
a
nd
red
pe
pper
s
Cleland
to follow.
Brown residence . 1h mile
forced air furnace . 5 yrs.
9·12 ·6tc PRIVATE meellng room for
Larry Dugan 235; Be t ty
Fa rm s. Geraldine Cleland .'
units, naf .• gas furnace,
below Reedsville on S R
'lbe moon is between its Smith 197 .
Racine Phone 949 4121.
old . Aboul 'I• acre. $19,500.
any
organization.
phone
99
2
and
lol for only $9500.
124
.
Furnllure
,
clo
thing
,
Second high •nd . game ~
B 19 lfc
3975.
512,SOO .OO Buys this
first quarter and full phase.
d1shes
.
etc.
CB
350
Honda
1965
HILL
CR
EST
mob
ile
REALLY
A LOCATIONLarry Dugan 211 Betty
. J. Jllfc
motorcycle
lovely 1 floor plan older
home
For
more
in .
The morning stars are
Whitlatch 194
A
nice
3
bedroom home
-LET
us
serv1ce
your
Volks
·
------ .,..L ~ 9 15 51p
formation , call 949 5261.
home in good neigh High series - Larry Dugan
wagen , reasonable rates .
with
oak
floors,
inod. klt .,
Venus, Saturn, Jupiter and
9 10 ·81c
60a ; Betty Smi th 542.
M1dd leporf Pennzoil North
borhood. 3 bedrooms, bath,
cook
and
bake
units.
Hot
Mars.
Second high series - Ed GARAGE SALE , 5 Family,
Sec ond Street , Middleport .
dining room , lots of new
starting Monday and ending 10 x 50 MOBILE home, fur ·
water
heat
,
full
basement
Voss
549
,
Mary
Voss
503.
Phone 992 .9973
The evening star is Mernished, very clean $2,900. ONE 1975 Bass boat , 14ft. , 50
Sat urday , at 454 South Th1rd
carpeting, tile &amp; paneling.
Team h1gh game - Jac k's
and
walk
to
work .
8 19 ·261c
h
p
.
motor
with
Troll
motor,
Phone
742
5825
Ave, Middleport. 10 ll11 6.
cury,
Dairy Bar 745 .
Nautral gas heat . Nice
depth
t
inder.
Phone
992
·
$31,500.00
every day , something new
9.10·61c
Team high se rie s ~ Jack's
IN DASH 23 Channel Citizen's
yard . Close to schools.
Those born on this date are
2SSS
FOR APPOINTMENT
added every dav .
Dairy Bar 2059
Band transceiver, am .fm
9.11
.6tc
NEW BRICK &amp; FRAME9
14
5tc
under the sign of Virgo.
TO SEE
mpx radio, 8 tra&lt;:k stereo.
3 bedrooms, Rtbbon win Call 992 3965
Republican
William FOR SALE
GARAGE SALES, Sept 19 , 20,
19 7? ARROW Cam per , phone
dows for easy furniture
9 · &lt;~ tfc
Howard Taft, 27th president 1971 11 FT . YellowSione truck
and 21, 9 a m ·6 p .m Two 1969 CHEVY C10 truck. V·8.
99 ? 54 68
arrangement.
l'h baths w.
- ~ -- --------~-dressers with m1rrors.
$1,300or wlll trade t~r car of
a· 15 26 tp 1/ 1 RUNNER ,beans , pick your
oftheUnitedStates, was born
E~~J~rn.t c~~~fiiJ~n~~.a~~~ • oak
built
in
lavatories,
Wife
------'-~~--niuzzle loading r ifle , 22
equal value . Phone 992 -2:987.
own . S2 bushel . David Yost ,
Sept. 15, 1857.
:;;.t;: :. ~;; ;, : 9n562 1 or 992 2205 ••..., ... " L a~tomatic rifle with scope,
9.10-6tc
saving
kitchen,
lots
of
Great Bend, Portland , Ohio .
12 GA . high power sheets.
play
pen,
"
c, •' ' ' _o.._
"
9.1tf~C - ·t11rf:TV·- bed,
cabinet
space,
range
and
________
-ltc
9·14
S3
83
box
;
Remington
or
ba1hinette , other baby 1965 FORD truck , S250 Phone
~:. " .).~
Super X .22 mag . $2 60 box;
oven. Dining area has
furniture , stone ja rs , milk
130&lt; I 882.3390
22 L R 73c box . Save also on MAR...BI:.E top dresser and
baffles, e lectric fan , rad ios ,
double glass doors leading
9 14 6tc
antique 'china closet, Queen
new and used guns many
..,_uJ ....
record player , lawn chairs,
to patio . All electric . 1 acre.
Ann
design
.
Phone
992
·3102
used S. B. - D. B. 's, auto 's,
tools, dishes. kitchen tools, 1960 CHEV 6 cyl . standard,
after
5 p .m
Easy financing . $25,900.
pumps.
discount
on
all
new
po ts and pans , old tr unk ,
selling for parts Phone 992
9· 10.6tc
Unscramble these four Jumbles.
9·14·6tc
guns and extra barreJs .
WE CAN SELL YOUR
toys , children's clothing.
5585
one letter to each square, to
Fife's, Back of Speed Queen
curtams. b~dspreads , bags
2 BEDRM . modern house, all
9.143t c
PROPERTY
HERE'S
Laundry Mat, Jrd St , TWO m ix ed Hereford cows to
form four ordinary words.
of mortar , UQht, also other
elec., just been remodeled, 4
WHY
Experience ,
freshen soon. Also , 1969 LTD
Middlepor t.
ilem.s . ·Located at Raymond
lots, 50 x ~00 in all. Will sell
ford
Phone
843·2353
.
Service,
Action,
Honesty.
9· 12· 12tc
L Olive.r residence Phone 1969 F"IR~ANE 302 V8
reasonably . Phone f304} 882.
9·14·6tc
C' .,,..., "'"'~ ''" r.. ....
· "
992 .3366, 1/:l mile above Five
standard transmission, very
Call l\low 992-2259
~219.
~_.:
Points on State Rt. 7, watch
good .condition . Phone 992 . BED and dresser 550 South ---- -- ----~--9-10·6tC \
for signs
.
Third St., Middleport.
SOBS
Phone 992 ·507a .
9· 12 ·61c
~~~~-2~:-:-~~ ~/
_!~~tc
9·12-31p
1970 'h TON Ford P ic kup,
~(;~
5 FAMILY Yard Sa le . misc .
1975 Starflre dldsMobile
ilems, Take Rl. 124 lhrough . good condition . See at Baum ONE
with 18,000 miles On~ 1974
Lumber, Chester. Phone
Salem Center, first left off
Honda motorcycl ~ with 4,000
614 985·3301.
9. 12 .31c
Rl. 124 onto Co Rd 1. fourth
miles. Both' new con'dltlon .
~===::=:::::O';;:;~l
hou se on right. Monday -~-----------Phone 992 7692.
·Hs
~,.
through Fr iday, ·9 till 4 p .m
.,. 61
I&lt;.AMtiLtk. ,
1967
9· 12·31c
1
9 · 1.4 -Jtc
-r
~
y
WHO
Camara
.
Phone
992
·
2892,
WH,D;' THE ~u
------------I 9S7 B
d
CB 100 Honda , $250. 6
WENT ON .AN UN5UCv A R D Sale , upper section of
can be seen a
roa · 1972
piece drum set, $300. Phone 1971 KAWASAKI Phone 247CE&amp;SfUL FATIENING
Rust ic H ills , Syrac use .
way , Middleport
992 2502 .
9·14·3tc
2813 after 5 p.m. ·
9· 12 ·3tc
DIET SAIP... .----.
....!!:r:'..~.d~y . and Tuesda~· 14 · 2tc ____ .:..,._...l..-:--------··- 9·1&lt; ·31D
1L
1949 'WILL.:YS Jeep. good ~
1
• ..., :. ,.
,1 • - .--: - ,...-------- -running condition . Complete NEW EARLY American sota, 6 MONTH Old Holstein bull.
~ LAST WEEK for yard sale . · with top large tires and set gold and wh lie floral design, ·Also , 6 month old Jersey
Ld'IIJI D
Now arran~re the circled tetrdS ' : Clol-!'l\ng, d i sh~s, II: pri~e ,
of new chains, SSOO . Donald
90 in . long, ,$175. 2 pieces of
bull , both can be registered.
i
furniture. J wn,te lavatones
Pooler. Chester, Ohio .
No . 4 ol electrical cable. 20
.Phone 992 2264 .
.
to form the 1urpr ae anawer, 88 ·
$3 each , truck ·car cha in,
Phone 1614 , 985 . 38 97 .
ft and 25 fl . Phone 992-2779.
.
_ ._ .
_
.
surrested by the above cartoon.
Kenrnore washer with sud
9. J4 .Jtc
9.1ntc
:'¥' )" '
saver. Sunbeam coffee poth, - - - - - -- - - - -- - -~---------...!.--13., FT . FLEETWING troller,.
!'love. icel;lox , commodej
~b
Hoawmls
i
l,to~·
h
~,f:c~n~~~~s~~~
FOR SAL E OR TRADE, 1971 STER:EO·RAOIO. modern
- - - - ,12
Vega, e~tra nice . radial
sink, spare tires. Used 3
design
,
a
track!
tape,
am
.fm
1
•
each, sizePhone
16. black742
yarn,
t ·, res. Also, a 1949 Ford
limes, like new . $725 " or
(An•wer• tomorrow)
pr,·ce
·6273 .
• ,
radio combination. Balance
,
Ptckup, sharp , $450. Phone
l.rade for aft truck camper.
$102.59, or terms . Call 992 .
Jun•hlr•; DRAWL ' JUDGE SHOULD TOUCHY
County R:d 10 from L.angs
992 3259
Phone 992 ·7106
3965.
I
vii i ~. 1 1 mile .
9 14 .6t c
9 14.Jtc
Y·Y-tfc
9·9.1fc

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.2 SIGNS

OF
QUALITY

7:... 'l'Jie ueuy ..enune,,

' nJ~ ""'4&lt;;\'

MIUWpul.,...,...._.,,_v., moolllly, ::il!p1. ta, 11115

..~-._.~.-~~~~~_..__._.~-.~~--~~~~~~~~--~~~~~._~~.._---.,w~~~~-~~~~~~~"'"'~~

Television log· for easy viewing

EmplOyment Wanted

-B usiness Services

Dan's Shoe Repair

FJtEE ESTIMATES

MONDA'i' LSEPTEMIER IS,lt7~
~:30-,-Bewltched

3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family I;
Get Smart 15.
S:OO-a-111 3; Family Affair 1: Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5: 30-Adem-12 •: News 6; Bev..-y Hillbillies I;
Adem'l2 13; El«. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3,.4.1,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Spec:lel Education 33.
6:30-NBC Newa3A, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 1,10.
7:00-TruthorCons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Bowling for
Oollers 6r Buek Owons I ; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Men Builds, Man Destroys
20; No-Honest.l y 33 ..
7:30-That Good Ole Nalhvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test~; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht 8;
Evening Edl~lon with Martin Agronoky 20; To Tell
the Trutli 13; Untamed World 15; Marco Sportllte :
FootbaltJ:!.

U.S. COINS

For Rent

LARRY LAVENDEI{

Dan's Shoe Repair

II

POME~!! E~~.~~~ co.@

Racine Plumbing
&amp; Heating

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED

'(OU WIL~·EA!PY­

WITH WA!&gt;H A$
YOUR COPILOT!

SMITH NELSON
MOIORS, INC.

First -

L.ISml.'W,

WEST
62

llllS IS

•

•

'PJ'V£3
Hf3W ME
UP!

97

R

Shops .the

Pus

L--------.J
By Otwald &amp; James Jaeoby
Oswald : "The American
Bridge Teacher's quarterly is
always a fine source for bandl
used by teachers to illuatrate
points of play ."
Jim: "They are almost
always very simple and
straight forward, so that even
beginners can underBtand and
follow them."
Oswald: "Today's hand is
described by Paul Boardman. It
is an exercise in not drawing
trumps."
Jim : "Paul pointa out a
t111mp or diamond lead would

ALlEY OOP
W...O TH' HIOCJ( IS
THAT BIG DUDE?

BUSINESS HAS JUST ABOUT II.E·
TURNED 10 NORMAL SIWCE WE
CUT OUT THE ENTERTAIWMENT!

HE AIN'T NO DUDE,
BOSSI THAT'S BIG
JOHN, TH' PROSPECTOR!

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shock

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DEPEN~BLE

NAME-FOLI&lt;S'LL
E:Xpea&lt; Yd TO
PLAYll-i' GAME-

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served.

zs Son of

For T~, Sept. 1t, 1171

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Williams

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b:~:oo
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sash
'35 Roman
weight
unlls

L~o;!_,~9;:!c;::a::!t'::JI-::::_q:!;!;'":.::: Z7 Gaelic
poem
,. Twine

50 INTERE5TINC7 5C\'Ni'&lt;)NES NO/-ING_I_N'""'-

arr THERE

'IOU'VE B~ GLUED

iO THE HOUSE NEXT
DOOR. I'M. TRYING 1D

10THATWINDOW
RJR AN HOUR .

c;iETAGANDERATOUR

RIP ?

3t Price paid

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to wor

NEW NEIGHBOR&amp;.

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A X Y D L BAA X 1t
L 0 N GF B L L 0 W

CRYPTOQUOTE
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THEY'RE

BLA5TUV' ANOTHER

OAOBURN HIGHWAif OVER TH'

MOIJ(I)TAll\1, MIZ LEDBETTER·-

NO--I:

IT TREMBLES

SHORE
DIDN'T,

All 1H'TIME

OPNR
BORT

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MF

siderably.

B0 RWR

YWJD.-BRWTRW

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RWOPWK.

ALL DISEASES IS DIAGNOSIS. -

DR.

KAJU- KRAUS

HOW DIO I{OV COME OVT ?
DID 1{01/ PI.N( WEU.?

DIDN'T 'IE HEARTH' AIRTH
TREMBLE THIS MORN!(\)'?

'

y 0 ur
s·I rthday

alert loday. Something unique
_,
8
Is developing thai will make Th
jjt; 168' 1975
general 1m1
what you're working on unere w
e
.
usualty profitable.
prov~ment lh rs commg year In
condttlons contnbullng to your
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cL 23) Your malarial security. Be prudent.
tact and graciousness today Set aside a lit11e surplus you'll
will enable V'lU to manage a be accumulating .

OVER HERE

LOWEEZV

SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 22)
You'll be getting something
that has small value to another ,
yet II will be ol considerable
worth to you It's likely to come
secretly.
IAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Through 8 conversation
with a friend today, lnfC?rmation
will be disclosed to Ign ite a
bnghl plan and embark you on
a new venture
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen.
11) Situations relattng to your
career and financial prospects
are very encouragmg today . If
you have an ace In lhe hole,
play II.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)
You're at your best today It
confronted by a challenge.
Success 1s likely in whalever
you put your m ind to .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2f)
Something you 're presently in valved 1n will turn out to be of
far more benefil lo you lhan il
appeared on the surface .

ARIEl (11.,.,., 21 · Aprll18) Try
10 break away from roullne loday. Do something new and
lmaglnallva you've ~een think ~
lng about. but haven I yet tried .
TAURUS (April 20-ller 20)
Your chances of success are
very good now. Your emblllons
are in harmony with your
desires Go after what you
want.
QEIIINI (Mar 21-June 20)
You'll do well In any situation
today where you'll be able to
express yourself crQatlvely. Put
your talent to a profitable use.
CANCER (June 21-Jul}' 22)
The liming Is now right to make
changes you've be8n contemplating that could benefit
your family. Begtn today.
LEO
(.lui}'
23-Aug.
22)
Because you ' re willing to
cooperate today, someone Is
going lo go a low exira slops •
for you, to ptease you con-

H J J A M T E , VI ROO (Aug. 2:1-Sepl. 22) Be

• \'etterday'l Qypls...U: ONE OF THE MOBr COMMON OF

-- ---~ ----- - --

,,

k It

One letter aimply Jlanda for another. ln thia sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O' s, etc. Single letters,
apootrophes, the lencth and formation of lhe words are all
biDts. Each day the eode letters are different.

'

•'

delicate situation In a way so
that everyone's Interests will be

COV\PAI'JY~AH - ApMhnKihlte
~ •• oons
GO'Irr ••
"J"
drwn

--------------

'

1:00-- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

r-,-T-H_'_a.J
.........L:..Y........,.._ 27 =d~r

-IF 'Ki GOT'TH'

. . ..-. ....,_J

I.J

of~.....,;-~tree-r.-~

5:00-Bonanza 3; Family Affair S; Mister Rogers
20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:30--Adem-12 ~; Beverly Hillbillies S; News 6 ; Adam ·
12 13; E lee. Co. 20,33.
6:00-News 3, •• 8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Sesame St. 20;
Jody's Body Shop 33.
6:30-NBC lllews 3.~.15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Your Future Is Now 33.
7:00-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth~; Bowling lor
Dollars 6; Wilburn Brothers 8; Name That Tune 13;
News 10; Family Affair 15; Antiques 20; Jean
Shepherd's America 33.
7: »-Hollywood Squares 3,~; Let's Deal Wl1h II 6;
$25,000 Pyramid 8; Evening Edition with Marlin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell the Trulh
13; Wally's Workshop 15; Scene One, Take One 33.
8 :DO-Movln' On 3,~. 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Good Times
8,10; When Television Was Live 20,33.
8 :30-Welcome Back, Koller 6,13·; Joe and Sons 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.33.
9:00-Pollce Story 3.~. 15; Rookies 6, 13; Switch 8, 10;
Nova 20,33
10:00-Joe Forrester 3.~.. 15; Marcus Welby, M .D. 6, 13;
Beachon Hill 8. 10; News 20; Interface 33.
10:30--Woman 20.33.
11 :00-News 3.~.6.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Wide World Mystery 13;
FBI 6; Banacek 8; Movie "China Seas" 10; Janak!
33.
12:3~Wide Worl&lt;' Mystery 6.

· dam

___________

--------------

(Do you have a question lor
lhe Jacobys? Write "Ask the
Jacobys" care ol lhi~
newspaper. The most interesting questions will be
used m ·this column and
writers will receive copies ol
JACOBY MODERN.)

~In~~~

.,,.-,_. ~.

f

if dwnmy is void?
The answer to this one is to
play ace and then queen. ~n
case one opponent held K x z x
and bis partner J x, this will
pick up the jaek and get you out
with the loss of just one trump
trick .

7: 30-Schoolles 1D.
8 :00-Lucy Show 6; Capt. Kangaroo S,10; Sesame St.
33.
8:30--Big Valley 6.
9:00-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue~. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with D. J . 13.
9 : 30--Not For Women Only 3; One Life to Live 6;
Musical Chairs B; New Zoo Revue 13.
10:00--Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3.•. IS; Dinah 6; Glve.N Take 8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:30-Wheel of Fortune 3,~. 15; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; I Dream of Jeannie ~;
Gambit 8, 10.
11 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,1S; Happy Days 13;
Midday ~; Love of Ute 8, 10.
11 :5s--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:110--Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, IS; Showoffs 13;
Bob Braun's S0-50 Club ~; News 6,1, 10.
12:30-Jackpot 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:55-NBC News 3.
1 :00-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:30--Days of Our Lives 3.~. 15; Lers Make a Deal 6.13.
2:00--$10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8, 10; Nova
20.
2:30-Doclors 3,4;15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8, 10.
3:00-Another World 3.~ .. 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Match Game 8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattlet~les
8, 10; Romagnoli•' Table 20.
~:oo-Mr. Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin ~; Somerset 1S;
Mickey Mouse Club 6; 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Movie
"Klssln' Cousins" 100; Dinah 13.
~:30--Bewllched 3; Mod Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Get Smart 15.

ZO Ancient
Pef8ian

----- ---------

r:( . ., .. "\

trumps

6:00--Columbus Today ~; Summer Semester 10.
6:25-Farm Report 13.
6:30-New Zt&gt;o Revue ~; News 6; Bible Answer&gt; 8;
Concerns &amp; Comments 10; Rev . Cleophus Robinson
13.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:55-&lt;huck White Repom 10; News 13.

%5 Gave a

Auto Sales

I VABER

how do you play your

DOWN
prison
13 "- Butter- 1 Malllre
%Greek
fly"
marketplace
14 Simple
3 Move
Simon met
Yesterday'• Aarwer
quickly
him(2 wda.)
( 4 wds.)
10 Backed
24 Valiant lady
15 Sea eagle
out ol
25 French
16 Barbara- 4 Be mistaken
5 Attach
a deal
statesman
Geddes
16 Dance
Z7 Tllt
17 Relative of f Claw
11
7 Italian
festival
30 Moderate
&amp;utomne"
three
19 Punctures 31 Ship
18 Hale
a Returning
zo MUan's
33 Tempo
zo Drink
( 2 wds.)
La 36 - session
greedily
t Superlative Z3 Got scent 37 Philippine
%1 Grasp
2Z Grotto

Miqht be a bless in'!
Make it easier t' qit th'
rope aroun'!

For Sale

;;~t~

tract,

by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
40 BeCIIIIIe
1 Fad; craze
complex
S Flower part 41 European
11 Stravinsky
river
1% Way out of

Yard Sale

~1]1WI :~lli!J;-Iki

A reader from Connecticut
A Q 10 9 &amp; 4
and are in a four-spade con-

aw if you hold •

tlt)lf• ~-,t

fhe

~

6•

Pass
Opening lead - J •

Wanted To Buy

U!,.ttl£~1

Eul

queen."

Real Estate for Sale

Sale

North

Wnt

Wanted

Mobile Homes

- . "East has to take bls ace and
must either allow South to ruff
in dummy and discard a diamond or lead away from his
king up to dummy's ace-

8oth vulnerable

WANT AD WAY

Local Bowling

spade."

.,~

.... 732

TEAFORD
... " '

QJ 108

tKJ8

.KQ16
SOtrrll
6KQ10843

'

•. '

9"1(

6J109~~

'TI~ THIS
I,-ICtJll.l

Notice

..

EAST

a~ 2
eiOB2

THE' -miRD

-·-· -- --- -----~ -.

Pets

·- ....
e AQ71

For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

1111D South' s party, but lbe actual lead wu lbe jack of clubs.
This enables South to make lbe
hand by lbe simple expedient of
crou-rufflnc out lbe hearta and
clubs and finally throwing Eut
In wllh his ace of trumps. The
line of play is to win the first
trick with lbe ace of clubs while
discarding a heart from dummy . Ruff a club; casb ace of
hearts, cross ruff the rest of the
hearts and clubs and lead a

15

6H765
9 At 53

BORN I,DSE:~--'----.,

TUESDAY,SEPcEMBER16, 1975

Don't draw trumpsl

NORnt

The Daily Sentinel

NOW HIRING

Jeanne

WIN AT BRIDGE

Ml
PENNZOIL

Help Wanted

r

INPGSPf AWD
WHO'LL PILOT
rr, ~UH 'f

8:00-Bobby VInton 3; Barbary Coast 6.13; Invisible
Man 4, 15; Gunsmoke 8; About Charles lves 20,33;
Rhoda 10.
1:30-We Think You Should Know 3; Phyllis 10.
9 :oo-Movle "The April Fools" 3,4, 15; College Football
6,13; All In the Family I, 10.
9: »--J.\audel, 10; ·
Wolf With . . . 20; Boardl ng
House 33 .
1P:oo-Medlcal Center 8,10; News 20; Session 33.
10 :30--Earthkeepli\q 33.
11 :00-News 3,.,8,10, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3.~.15; Movie "night of Terror"
8; Movie "Bod Bascomb" 10; Janakl 33.
12:00-News 6,13.
12:3~FBI 6; Untouchables 13.
1:(»--Tomorrow 3,•.
1 :30--News 13.

I

�,.
•

•

••

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Sept 15. 1975
HAND LACERATED
RACINE - The Racine ER
squad was called today at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Continued from !»'ge 2
9:45 a. m. for Clifford Hill ,
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
Manning Webster, director Le ~rt Falls, wh o had a
Herman
Warner,
emeritus ; Mr. and Mrs. severe laceration or his hand . Pomeroy; Deanna Cundiff,
Roger Morgan , Mr . and Mrs. He was ~ken to Holzer Mason .
Horace Karr, Dr. and Mrs. R. Medical Center .
SATURDAY
DISE . Boice, Mr . and Mrs. Orion
CHARGES - Benny Spears,
Roush, Directors ; Mr . and
Carroll Smith, Clyde Bing,
Charles Weber, and Mr .
NOW YOU KNOW
Helen Lochary, Raymond
. and Mrs. Homer Baxter ,
New York Ci ty's subway
Michael Clarence McDaniel.
custodians, and gues ts , Mr . system run s 7,200 tr a in s
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Mr . dail y, ca rrying 4 million
Nancy Manley , Middleport;
and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich, Mr. passengers - more tha n
Bertha Lasher, Middleport;
and Mrs . Emerson Jones, Amtrak , the nati onw ide
Be tty Morton, P omeroy ;
Norma Newland, Mrs . Hazel passenger ra il net work,
Patricia Roush, Gallipolis ;
Groff, Mr. a nd Mrs. Le onard carries in three months.
Wal te r Laudermilt, Racine ;
Erwin ( who built th e bank ),
Charlene Wallbrown , Lo ng
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kerr, Mr.
Bottom.
LOCAL TEMPS
and Mrs. Pa ul Baker , heating
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Temperature in downtown Leslie Artrip , Elberta
and air conditioning : Mr . a nd
Mrs. Patrick Richey, Richey Pomeroy at 11 a . m . Monday Sc huler, Sandra Hall , Donna
Sign Co., Zanesville; Mr. and wa s 65 degrees under pa r- Welch, Clara Redford .
Mrs. Andy Anderson and Mr. tially cloudy ski es.
and Mrs . Ken Sch ultz,
Lefebure Cor p., Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Fos ter Baker,
Joseph Lewis Johnston , 60, Portland , Ore ., and Rex, in
Dayton, Mr . and Mr s.
Cincinnati, and two sisters,
Richard Chambers, Mr . and died Saturday morning at his
Miss. Mary Johnston, and
Mrs. Steve Cartwrt gh t, home, 613 W. Second St.,
Sweeney-Ca rtw r ight Co., Wellston, after a long illness. Mrs. Eileen Littljohn , both of
Wellston.
Mr . Johnston was born in
Colwnbus; Mr . and Mr s. Tom
Two sisters preceded him
Johnson, Fifth-Third Bank, Meigs County, the son of Mrs.
in death.
Cincinnati , and Mr . and Mrs . Lelie Powell Johnston,
Services will be Tuesday at
Ken Kabelka , Huntin gt on We llston , and the late
1
p.
m . at llle Tt;inity United
National Ba nk , Columbus . Raymond Johnston . He had
Methodist Church with the
Richard Chambers gav e lived in Wellston 37 years.
Rev
. C. H. Rit'e and the Rev.
Mr. Johnston attended the
prayer preceding the dinner .
Deloss Smith officiating.
Trinity United Methodis t
Burial will be in Ridgewood
Church, was a member of
Cemetery. Friends may call
ASKS TOWED
Black Diamond Lodge 538,
at the family home after 10 a.
A marriage license has F&amp;AM; was past master of
m. today . Masonic services
been issued to Jam es Robert Wellston Chapter 174, Royal
will be held this evening at
Lodwick, 18, Chester, and Arch Masons; past master or
7;30 followed by Eastern Star
Karen Lee Reed , 18, Chester . Wellston Council 120, Royal
rites. Arrangements are by
and Select Masons; a junior
the
.Jenkins Funeral Home.
warden of Jackson ComDIES SUNDAY
mandery 53, Knights TemWord has been received of plar, a member of the
the death Sunday of Marvin Scottish Rite, Valley of
Finlaw, 59, Zanesv ille , for - Columbus, and the Wellston
Major League Leaders
merly of Pomeroy. Funeral Chapter, Order of Eastern
By United Press International
Leading Batters
services will be held in Star .
National League
AB . R . . H. Pet.
Zanesville on Wednesday.
He was a machinist with Mad lock , ChGi. .125
495 76 179 .362
the A. P. Gree Co., Pyro Smm ns. SI.L 143 522 76 179 .343
Sng ln , Pit
123 444 52 147 .331
Division, Oak Hill.
Wa t son , Hou 130 481 67 155 .322
Surviving in addition to his Morgan. Ci n 136 468 f/7 150 .321
mother, are his wife, Gladys Cardenal , Ch 141 526 8 1 168 .319
Joshua , SF
12 1 474 69 151 .3 19
Bocook Johnston; three sons, Rose. Cin
150 617 102 193 .313
TONITE THRU THUR .
SEPT. 15 - 18
Wendell L. and Joseph E., Garvey , LA 148 609 75 190 .312
Bowa. Phil
122 525 69 163 310
NOT OPEN
both of Wellston, and Charles,
American Leagu e
G. AB R .. H .. Pet.
of Lancaster; two daughters,
Care w , M inn 13 1 490 85 176 359
Mrs. Lelia (Kit) Beckner, Ly nn , Ba s
136 494 95 166 .33 6
Hamden, and Miss Lorene Munson , NY 146 554 81 175 .316
Rice. Bos
138 542 89 168 310
FRI., SAT., SUN .
(Missie) Johnston, at home; Orla , Chi
1'29 499 62 154 .309
SEPT. 19-21
eretl, K C
146 58 &lt;~ 81 180 .308
six
grandchildren;
five
W. W. and the
Sn g!tn , Ba 1 1&lt;16 558 84 17 1 .306
brothers, Delbert and Jack. WshgJn·, Oak 136 542 79 166 .306
DIXIE DANCEKINGS
both of Wellston ; Donald of M c Rae , KC 126 480 58 147 .306
Seattle, Wash.; Ronald of Braun , M inn 126 43 1 66 132 .306

Hospital News Notices, local ·
news, in brief

Dinner

Mrs:

Joseph L. Johnston, 60, dies

MEIGS THEATRE

*

lq)pmings

mPTifOD

RUTLAND

Th e

auxlllary of the Rutland Fire

Dept. will meet Tuesday,
Sept. 16, at the lire house.

ReiTLAND - The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will
hold a weekend re11 iv al
beg inning Seft. 19 a nd
through the 2ls at 7: 30 p. m .

nightly . The Rev . Herbert

Durr. pastor of a chur ch at
Datazia , N . Y ., will be the
evangelist. In the ministry 25
years .

he

ha s pastored

in

Ripley , Warren , Pa ., Loc k -

port and Corning . N. Y.; has
had a radio program 10
years, and has prea&lt;.h""d in
Finland ,
Poland
and
Ecuador . Accompanying him
wi ll be his wife, Sharon, and

seven -year -old daughter whO
will both sing solos . There
will be specia l singing each
evening. The public Is in v i ted .

HARRISONVILLE - THE
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens will hold a potluck
and birthday supper Sept . 23

at 4 p. m. at Ft. Meigs Park .
There

will

be

music

and

-

at the Bethlehem Baptist
Church beginning Sept . 22
through Sept. 28 at 7:30p . m .
nightly . Singers are invited to
participate. Earl Shuler is the
pastor . The church Is located
in Great Bend at the junction
of SR 124 and 338 . The publ ic
is invited.

SHERY L L. LITTLE,
Pomeroy, has filed suit for
divorce against Vernon R.
Little. R1. 1. Middleport .
charging gross neglect of
duty and extreme crue lty .

THE
ME tGS
BAND
Booste rs will meet this
evening at 7: 30 i n the band
room at the high school.
Plans will be made for money
making projects to complete
payment for the new band
uniforms . All parents and
band boosters are urged to

attend.

MEIGS COUNTY WILL not
receive tulip bulbs according
to Car.ol yn Thomas who has a
telter lirom. 1/le HoJ)and Bulb
Comp\my statl~g tNat due to

the lack of su~ply, none will
be available .

JOHN C. LAMBERT, Point
Pleasant ,
formerly
ol
Pomeroy, now teachmg at
River view
Elementary
School at Reedsville, is hom e
from
Good
Samaritan
Hospital , Cincinnati'.

•
•••
•

Vacancies filled Celeste Party held
on concert
hoard to fight
.
hei:
'

Tracy Norrts was hoD~
on ber third birthday with •
party at the. home Of

.

- \

· Two vacancies on the TriCounty Community Concert
Association ' s executive
board were filled Saturday
night during the association's
board meeting at River by.
Mrs . Evan C. Roderick,
Gallipolis, was named
president and H. 0. Francis,
also of Galtipolis, was named
treasurer .
Following the initial week
of the association's annual
membership drive , an
association spokesman said
today 672 memberships have
been purchased by area
residents, approximately 100
ahead of last year's record
718 at this stage of the

Whites

games .

A REVIVAL WILL be held

••
••

(Continued from page !)
topcoats and wore gloves . It
was the coldest day of the
current school year.
Observers at Charlestown
and South Boston high
schools- strongholds of the
antibusing movement - said
lllere appeared to be more
white neighborhood children
walking into llle schools.
awesome
police
The
presence at Charlestown
appeared to be cutback,
although poHce officials
declined comment on the
deployment of troops .
The start of the second
week of the second year of the
busing plan was marked by
the culling in half of llle 600.
man National Guard unit
which had been ordered into
Boston in case of violence.

campaign.
Mrs. Donald Hippensteel,
ge ner-a l
membership
chairman , her division
chairmen, captains and
workCl;S drew praise at the
meeting for lllelr excellent
efforts in this year's drive .
Workers were urged to
complete their convassing
and tum in llleir 1975-76
memberships as soon as
possi ble to division chainnen .
Th e tri-&lt;:ounty area is again
a ssured of an excellent
concert series this year.
Sale headquarters is
located at the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce office, 16 State St. Family
memberships are $30, adult
memberships $10, stud ent
memberships $5 and senior
citizen memberships ( 60 and
over) also $5.
·

parents, Mr. and Mra:

•

ISSUeS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Lt .
Gov. Richard Celeste says
llle proposed coilstitutional
amendment granting tax
incentives to industries
locating in or expanding in
Ohio is llle most dangerous of

four

economic

· Darrell Norris, Apple Grove;
The " Raggedy Ann and:
Raggedy Andy" them(
featured two blrlllday cakeC
which were served witll
pWJch, cOffee and Ice cream:
Gifts were pte.~ented to U.
honored guest and picture$

recovery

issues proposed by Gov .
James A. Rhodes for the
November election ballot.
Celeste, a Democrat,
Saturday said he will campaign against the four Issues
and urged Ohioans to join
him . .
He said his efforts to defeat
the issues will be a ''zero
budget operation."
He said the $1.7 blllion
transportation bond issue and
the $2.7 billion urban
redevelopment bond issue
were poorly planned and do
not provide Ute money to
reach their stated goals.
He said the two issues could
ultimately cost Ohio taxpayers $11 billion to $13
blllion in principal and interest charges over the :IDyear repayment schedule.
"It is incredible," Celeste
said of the tax incentive
Issue. " ~t is a great raid on

KISSINGER VISIT
PLANNED
CINCINNATI ( UP! )
Henry Kissinger plans to be
here t wo days this week,
making a speech Tuesday
night and then talking willl
reporters Wednesday,
The secretary of state, to be
accompanied by his wife
Nancy , is to address 1,000
persons at a Cin cinnati
Chamber of Commerce
dinner 8::io p.m . Tuesday and
then talk with reporters at a
Wednesday morning news
conference.
Chamber officials expect
Kissinger to make " a major
foreign policy statement" in
his speech, which will be
followed by a question..andanswer session with the
audience.

the trea.:mry."
Of the fourth issue, to
permit Ohio to promote
revenue bond financing to
build low-and moderateincome housing, he said the
state should carry out
legislation enacted by the
General Assembly last year
to authorize revenue bond
financing for housing.

taken .

:

Attending were Mr. ancl
Mrs. Carl Wolfe, Jr., Megan:
Tricia and Wendy; Mrs:
Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mr&lt;
Virgil Roush, Mr. and ~
Dallas Hill and Dean, Mr. an4
Mrs. Marshall Roush an ~
Joe , Mr, and Mrs. Marvin
Hill and Andrew, Mr. ani
Mrs. Michael Hill, Dolly and
Mike, Mrs. Ruth DonoheW,
Mr. and Mrs . Cecil Rosebenf
and Tommy, Mr. and Mr(
Ted Russell and childre~, Mio
alid Mrs. Charles Hill an4
children, Miss Venitta Y01JI1C
and Bradley and Tra,ct
Mearrs.
..

"

SENArE 1'0 RErtlRN
:.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - 'l'bi
Ohio Senate will return IQ
Columbus Oct. 21 to work Cll
an energy-related bill pas ed
by the House last Thurllday,
The bill would give the
state new, !road powers lJi
keeping tabs on fuel ad:
justment clauses used b)\
electric companies to raise

rates for consumers.
~
Senate Energy and En•
•
•

v1ronmental
Committe.;:
Chairman
Robert·
O'Shaughnessy, DColumbus~
said his committee will hold·
extensive hearings prior 16
the reconvening date, aC
which time a vote is ex'~
peeled.
.•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

TWO CALLS WERE an ·
swered by the Middleport ER squad Sunday. At 7: 40 a. m.
the squad went to Middleport
Hill fbr Margaret Curlls who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and at
9: 35 p.m. to Locus I St. for

From a Great American Bank

POMEROY

Dept . was

called

Fire
to

Levy · rene.w al
·drive launched

•
·• Dr· G . Wilson Bowers
•."648" Board Chalnnan
·;9allla..Jackson-Meigs
-counties announced that
.Thereon Johnson, Executive
:,Vice-President of The Far:. mers Bank and Savings
:Company, Pomeroy, has
, accepted chairmanship for
' _the passage Of the Renewal
Mental Health Levy which
~ be on the November
,ballot in Meigs County,
, A two-tenths renewal levy
~to finance Meigs County •s
· share of the Gallia..Jackson:'Melgs Community Mental
. Heal Ill Center Is necessary
,tor the continuation Of the
"Meigs County Mental Health
:-:center, which Is located in
,the Old Meigs General
Hospital, 236 West Second
·~!reel, Pomeroy,
Passage of this levy for
:mental health services is
. necessary to continue belp for
those who are troubled and
· peek solutions to family or
.:personal problems through
~~he
services
of
the
:-Jirofesslonal staff of the
Mental Health. Center.
These services include:
Jollow-up care for discharged
:,P.,tienls from Athens Mental
: }fealtJ;I Center, psychological
:1estlngs, juvenile offenders,
•marriage counseling, in"dlvidual and group therapy,
and drug abuse education.
Officers Of the "648" Board
stated that passage of this
renewal levy will assure
. Meigs County $25,500 an'ilually from the State for
mental health and mental
· retardation services on the
basis Of three to one state
oJP81ching funds. The levy will
raise eight thousand five
hundred dollars ($8,500) in
order to receive the State
funding.
The total cost to the
average Meigs County
resident whose market value
of real estate _is eight
thousand dollars ( $8,000) the
cost would be 56 .·cents per
year, or If the appraised
value is twelve thousand
dollars ($12,000) .llle cost
.~ ~-"~'"" per )'el!f'.
The program is financed on
a regional basts . Including
Ga,11la and Jackson Counties.
Gallla and Jackson Counties
voted for a 10 year levy three
years ag;", but Meigs County
only asked for a three year
levy ; therefore, Meigs
County must place the
renewal levy on the ballot to .

oi

.. wR\s14·be

Hubert Stewart, also a
medical patient, taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

THE

·'.,

an

apartment building , 134
Mulberry Ave ., at 11 : 30 a . m .
Sunday . A fuse box in the
basement had burned out .
There
were
no
other
damages , Pomeroy Fire

Dept. Captain Tom Werry
reported .

assure continued mental
health care for Its residents .
The Center In Meigs County
is
fully
staffed
with
professionals including
psychologlats, social workers
and
mental
health
technicians. The "648" Board
has been seleclejl by the
National Health Corps, In
Chicago, Ill. to have a full
time psychiatrist, M.D. wlio
will be available at the Meigs
County CIJnlc. The passage Of
the renewal levy is necessary
to assure the continued
growth of mental h•alth
services in Meigs County.
The Center served over 5,000
patients in Gallla, Jackson
and Meigs Counties last year.
A new Comprehensive
Mental Health Center is being
constructed near Holzer
Medical Center, Galllpolls, to
serve the three cl&gt;unties. A
federal grant Of $1,141,000
was approved to the GalliaJackson-Meigs "648" Board
for the construction of this
facility at no cost to Meigs
County residents.
The Meigs County Center
serves all residents of the
county; no one is refused
services. Most of the
referrals are made by the
physicians, courts, schools,
and other agencies.
Dr. Bowen stated that the
renewal levy Is not to be
confused with the "189"
Mental Retardation program
of the Community School
which will also be on the
November ballot
Dr , Bowers made this
statement:
" Reaching all of us have
time limitatlons, please take
a few minutes to help this
cause for the sake of your
community, the people who
need llle services - and for
your own interest. Mental
Health is, after all, for you,
for me, for everyone. Willl
Ute community mental health
system, - You're Not Alone
- and it is in all Of our interests to insure levy continuance, and growth."
Meigs County "648" Board
-meffibers are, Mrs. Russell
(Jane) .Brown, Tom Kelly,
Mrs. Ernest (Maxine)
Wingett, and Mrs. Sellm J .
( Birginia ) Blazewicz, and
Meigs County Community
Mental Center, Inc. board
members are Judge Robert
Buck and Mrs. Robert (Leah)
Ord.

~-~·:::;:;;~;:;::;;;:;;;;:,_;~;:;:;.;.;;:;8::::::·:·:::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::--::::::::::

CLAIMED BY RIVER
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UPI) James M. McClung, 25, of
Canvas, W.Va., drowned in a
boating mishap while fishing
with his brother on the
Muskingum River near here
Sunday.

I

by perm i.o;sion of THE 13 1·:TTM i\N N ARCH I VE

JNews . . •in Briefsl
ByUmtedPn.shtenw~

BOAr DRIVER INJURED
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UPI)' Veteran racing boat driver
Jerry Hawley was seriously
injured when a boat he was
testing overturned in the
Niagara River Sunday, Erie
County sheriff 's deputies
said.
Hawley, 28, of Grand
Island, N.Y., was listed in
guarded condition with chest
and back injuries suffered in
the mishap.

· THERE ARE NEW SIGNS THE economy is recovering
&amp;om its worst recesalon in 30 years despite nagging pressures
for higher consumer prices and interest rates. Industrial
production - the output of the 118tion's mines, factories and
utilities -jumped 1.3 per cent in August, the biggest monthly
gpin in nearly three years.
, Business completed a sixth month of decllnlng inventories
lq July, the longest such period since the eight-month runoff
heralding the end Of the 1957~ recesalon. Declining factory
Inventories mean production will have to Increase even more
in the mootha ahead to meet coosumer demand. The coml!ination of rising production and declining inventories indicates deep cuts could be made this fall in the ranks of the
IJ!IIion's 7.8 million unemployed- provided the cost of living
d9es not rettirn to to the double-digit rates of last year.

1776: Down with the King.
Now, we are armed with our own declaration of freedom. We have proclaimed King George a tyrant, unfit
to rule a free people. Thomas Jeffe.r son 's Declaration
oflndependence has been approved and adopted. On
July 9th, General Washington sends its message to
his army inN ew York. Along with an order "that this
important event will serve as an incentive to every
officer and soldier to act with fidelity and courage
. .. " We -listen, and we are stir'red. We gaze at the
4,000.pol,lnd lead statue of George III towering over
us on Bowling Green. Soldier and citizen alike, we
have one thought. Throw it do\•rn! Later,. we realize
how hanqy it is made into rifle b~llets. ~

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

40,000.00 :Maximum Insurance
for Each Depositor

· 1

I

ME~BU

I

l)ls policy of peace with Israel. In Beirut, the Palestine
YIJeration Organization criticized "the threatening tone" Of
!!adat's comments, but condemned the dramatic guerrilla
attack against the Egyptian embassy in Madrid, Spain.
"The Egyptian front Is. as solid as a rock," Sadat said
Monday night in an emotional, 118tionally lroadcast speech
. diJring the 16-hour emba,ssy siege. The defiant prellident
to oppose Palestinian pressures and stici to Egypt's
~licy of peace despite increasing Isolation ~the Arab world.

..
OHWI

" Some
be

·

the

bone

who claim to
their finger~ to
ar'

simply

A FULL
SERVICE
BANK
~ORPORATION

should tack!~ that special
projet::f. If you need advice,
fools or ·materials visit the
"FR IENDLY ONES" and

., . WASHINGTON - CIA PIRECI'OR WilLIAM OOLBY
today a now retired branch cbief saved 11 grams Of
lethal polson on his own authority in 1910 because he felt White
House orders to destroy It were wasteful and senseless. Colby
spid in testlll!ony prepared for the first ~ bearings by the
SeiiBte Select - Committee on Intelligence that four
l;l1llgl'tlsalO cbalmien were Informed aa soon u the toxlmt
were dlacovered in.the CIA vault at Fl. Detrick, Md.
' The IOldns were extracted from lliellfish and cobra venon.
•· Colby was called to testify before Sen. Frank Church's
ciinmlttee which has probed intelligence activiUes at length in
cloaedsesslons. During those snsslooa the leftover toxins at the
~'s-lllologlcal labora!Qry at ~t. Detrick came to light.
Instructims to destroy chemical and ~ologlcal warfare
material at Ft. Detrick in were lsllued in 1970. But last May 20;
1f gna:D11 ri shellftBh to:lin and·eight mllllgr81J18 Of .cobra cvenon
were found in the small vault.
disc~

THE SAVINGS STORY OF THE YEAR! GLIDDEN'S PREMIUM LATEX WALL PAINT
AT AN UNBELIEVABLY ~OW PRICE! FAMOUS spred satin® Latex Wall Paint ...
RENOWNED FOR ITS PERFORMANCE AND DURABILITY. NOW THE BIGGEST
BARGAIN EVER. STOCK UP NOW DURING THIS FACT RV WALL PAINT·SALEI

•

(SMALL ADDITIONAL CHARGE FOR TINTED COLORS)

you' ll find you ·won 't have

to work your fingers to the
bone. our l?b Is making
'

Main Store; Annex and Warehouse Open Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm

..

POMEROY CEMENT
BlOCK CO.

ELBERFELDS IN ·poMEROY
0

Il '

ahgrlly warned Palestinian guerrillas against ''frightening

us" and said the Egyptian people are "solid as a rock" behind

wwed

·scratching your neaa
trying to figure out how you

FEPERA,L DloPOSIT INSURANCE

CAIRO, EGYPT - PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT has

ONE COAT
WHITE
ONLY

scratching their heads" .....

THE ;FARM.ERS BANK
AND ·sAVINGS CO.

~

CONOORD, N.H.- THE SOUND AND FURY Of a rerun
campaign gave way to the solitude Of curtained polling booths
today for a second attempt by New Hampshire's voters to
choose the nation'S· 1ooth U.S. Senator.
. It waa a replily of the closest Sell8te race in U.S. history,
which saw nearly 223,000 votes casilast November end in a
vjrtual tie between RepubllC$11 Louis C. Wyman and Democrat
Jqhn A. Durkin. Two state recounts followed by seven months
of Senate review failed to select a winner.

•

I

•

~

I

'

'•
k

'.t

'

'

"

·-

''

~

'

THEREON JOHNSON

•

Pomeroy coUncil Monday
night agreed to advertise for
bids on a new police cruiser
and to sell the old one. But it
was stipulated that Henry
Werry, captain of the
Pomeroy Pollee Dept., meet
willl council's safely committee to detennlne the make
and equipment wanted on llle
new vehicle.
Council was faced witb
many problems Monday
night , They ranged from
within the police department,
purchasing properly for new
city building, loitering on the
pal'king lot, persons drinking
alcoholic beverages openly
on the streets, and parking
problems related to the

repair of Ute upper parking
lot wall.
Edith
Sisson,
night
dispatcher, reminded council
she had asked for at least one
weekend a month off "a. long
time ago," instead ot every
Monday and Tuesday night.
She said nothing has been
done about it, and since she
has been wi Ill llle police
department longer than any
ot the other employes, she felt
that she should be given
''some consideration."
Council agreed and asked
Mayor Dale Smith to tell
Police Chief Jed Webster to
arrange
her
working
schedule for a weekend off
per month.

get-new cruiser
Capt. Werry told council
that wheri there Is work to be
done otber departments don ' t
want to do, llley refer it to the
pollee department. For
example, police are being
saddled willl work really the
responsibility of the water
department, he said. Council
agreed that if police work for
llle water company the water
company should compensate
them.
It was suggested llle safely
committee and police iron out
their problems.
Werry also observed that
when he was Acting Chief
there were a lot of back
parking tickets collected, and
now it is not being done.

The safely committee is
also to meet with cemetery
trustees to solve- some of the
problems at llle cemetery,
such as cutting weeds and
maintaining roads.
Council asked if llle radar
stolen from the cruiser was
insured . Since it Is not
knonwn for sure llley directed
Mrs. Jane Walton , derk, to
check willl llle insurance
company .
Mayor Smilll said the catch
basin on llle parking lot will
be repaired . He also reported
that piling on the upper
parking lot wall is driven and
the contractor is ready to
pour concrete .
A question was raised if a

person has a parking lot
penni! could they park at any
parking meter while llle lot Is
under repair , Council said
llley could use the parking Jot
permit at a different locatlon,
parking lot only, until the
work is completed.
.
Council reacted sternly
toward lol tering on the lower
parking lot and drinking pn
streets. Council noted that llle
persons guilty of loitering are
not teenagers but older
persons . They suggested
more arrests and maximum
fines be levied. It was noted
that if a person is arrested,
appears before Mayor Smith,
and pleads not guilty, the
:- (Continued on page Hi) -

en tine
VOL XXVII

Devoted To The Interests o( The Meigs-Mason Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1975

NO. 108

PRICE 15'

'

Algerians accept st•rreriders
of four contented gueiTillas
:ii::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::= - ~:~~=es~!:!'~~

39 delegates signed .·.•_1~e~er:.~~~~~:ti":sde~~
Constitution on 17th f:a:~;y:~:s ~':~~an:
1 .= .=1.·=

freed five Arab diplomats,

!,,/

'I'be Natlooel Society, Daughters of Ute American
Revolution, .•1111 the local chapter, Return Jonathan

~=~•;,red::a:i= ~a~o~~· :~~,

::::
Jolting and smiling broadly
:;:; Wider their nylon stocking

:.~ i:.~ : ~~~~s to:~~ew~~~t~~

s::
meeting In Philadelphia wbo signed tbe Conatiludou of
tbe United States
:;:;
For mauy ye..;., the DAR has aeUvely supported . .::.::
Constltutlou Week as oue of Its patrlodc projects. ·l'be

felt they had accomplished
their objectives and felt
certain Algeria woUld grant
them asylum .

~~=~f ~~:~~tut~:O :=: w~lctr~~e~c!: ~=:~~e:EJ~~
:1.1:1 .•

"KDow and respect your ConsUtuUon. Observe
Constltutiola Week", the DAR urges .
"

Courthouse news:

Extradition from
Florida waived
Sheriff Robert C. Har tenbach said today Gerald
Eugene Rupe, 25, Rutland,
aprehended in Orlando, Fla.,
on a traffic violation , and
wanted here in connection
with the. July 10 armed
robbery of the Kroger Store
in Pomeroy, waived extradition and will be returned
to Meigs County forthwith .
Deputy Kenny Decker left
this morning for Florida to
pick up llle detained Rupe.
The sheriff's Dept. also
reported this morning a
breaking and entering at
Salem Center Elementary
School. Details were not
available, but it was believed
entrance was made into llle
kitchen area.
The Meigs County Commissioners this morning
agreed to notify the record
conunisslon of a meeting in
llleir office on Sept. 30 at
10:30 a.m. Members of the
Record Commission are
Henry Wells, i..arry Spencer,
Bernard Fultz, and Howard
Frank. Purpose of the
meeting is to determine
which records should be kept
and which should be

morning aboard Algerian
:·:.:: PresIdent
H o ua r I
Boumedlenne's personal
twln-&lt;!ngine executive jet.
Witnesses
said
the
guerrillas raised their hands
in a clenched fist salute as
they got off the plane in predawn darkness at the seaside
airfield.
"We have achieVed our
objective - alerting Arab

destroyed. At llle meeting
were Wells, Warden Ours,
and Bernard Gilkey, commissioners; Wesley Buehl,
county engineer and Martha
Chambers, clerk.
Three suits for divorce
have been filed: Brady Edgar
Sayre, Racine, vs Sally Anne
Sayre, Watertown, N.Y., and
Cecil Banks, Rutland, against
Marjorie
Joan
Banks,
Middleport, each charging
gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty, and Jo Ann
McClintock, Rt. I, Racine,
against John F. McClintock,
same address, for gross
neglect of duty.
CALLED TWICE
The Middleport E-R sq\)ad
was called to 620 Locust St. at
2:17p.m. for Marion Francis
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and admitted. At 9:01a.m. Tuesday,
tQe squad answered a call
from Homer Cannan, 269
West Main St., Pomeroy, for
the Pomeroy unit which was
on another mission. Carman
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center.

t'

and international opinion to
the dangers Of Egypt's accord with Israel," the
guerrilla spokesman, who
identified hlrnseJf as Abou
Aisaa, told newsmen.
'The four well-dressed
gunmen
stormed
.the
Egyptian embassy in Madrid
Mond.a y morning, seizing
Ambassador Mahmoud Abdel
G h a f fa r, Consul Mohamed
Shaf!ei and press atteche
Mohamed Afflfi.
They threatened to execute
their three hostages unless
Egypt withdrew from peace
talks with Israel in Geneva.
After
16
hours
of
negotiations with Arab
diplomats, they agreed to fly
to Algiers and free their
captives.
Iraqi Ambassador Hassan
Nagib and Algerian Ambassador Mohanuned Khaled
Khelladi agreed to go along
as volunteer hostages on the

flight .

The five diplomats allghted
first from the plane and
boarded waiting limousines
for the trip to Algiers.
Just before he sUpped into
his car, Ghaffar said he was
"happy with the outcome of
the operation."
The gueniW.as met willl
reporters in the airport's VIP
lounge.
"We knew in advance
Vernon Weber, operator of
Egypt
would reject our
the Quality Print Shop in
Middleport, has announced demand for a public conpurchase of llle Goodwin demnation of Its accord wllll
(Colilfuued on page ]OJ
Printing Co. in Pomeroy.
Weber who bought the
company
from
David
Goodwin, will open a branch
of his Middleport shop in
Pomeroy as soon as possible.
The Middleport operation will
continue. The new branch
will be located on the first
floor of the former I.B. Weed
Wholesale Co. ~ullding now
owned by Richard Seyler.
The Ohio Department of
Weber, president of llle
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Health has recently apClub, has been in the printing pointed Joan S. Culp as
business in Middleport since Sanitarian for Meigs County.
the early 1950s. He learned Mrs . Culp is responsible for
his trade from the late Harry the enforcement of state
Houdashelt, later buying out sanitation laws, as well as ·
the Houdashelt business their regulation .
Mrs. Culp will be working
which was operated under the
same name, the "Quality in conjunction wiUt !be Meigs
County Health Department.
Print Shop,"
Weber is a native of the Her areas of concern include
the making of inspections and
Chester area.
investigations of sanitary
conditions at schools, mobile
home parks, camps, swimming pools and olller similar
operations. Food service
cent of its sales. Ford Motor operations,
such
as
Co. sales were down 21 per restaurant and bars, are an
cent but still the second best important area of her
early September sales in 15 responsibility.
years.
She will also work with
Chrysler was off 2.3 per Meigs County Sanitarian
cent and American Motors, Hilton Wolfe. Togelller llley
with new models taking 55 , will be conducting inper cent Of its sales, turned in speetions and providing
a 14.:; per cent drop.
technical advice concerning
Compared with August, the installation of individual
Sept. 1·10 sales were off 9 per sewage disposal and water
cent with the tradiUonal supply systems.
Mrs. Culp asks that any
dropoff closer to 19 per cent.
Analysts attributed most of Meigs County resident exthe ctrop from last year to the pressing an interest or
lower price increases already concern in the area of enannounced. Last year, talk of vironmental sanitation feel
average $400-$500 increases free to contact her at the
County
Health
pushed sales to near-record Meigs
levels.
Department, 114\'z E. Main
Street, PQrneroy .

Weber will

DETROIT (UPI)- Higher
prices on 19'16-model cars
apparently were no deterrent
to buyers who helped the U.S.
auto Industry to ita fifth
highest early September new
sales mark in history.
Nearly one of every five
cars sold . in the Sept. 1-10
period was a 1976 model on
which average prices were up
over $200. Formal introduction is not until late
September, but automakers
have given dealers permission to sell the cars as
soon as they reeelve them.
· Sales In the period totaled
150,241 cars, down 7.5 per
cent from a year ago but up
nearly 5 per ·cent from the

same period 1ii - 1973; - just
before the Arab oil embargo
jolted the industry into its
two-year slump.
Detroit automakers are
counting
cars such as the
new Chevrolet Chevette, a 4~
mile per gallon minicar, not
only to pull the Industry out of
the slump but to tum back the
tide of ilnporta which have
grabbed a record one of every
five sales this year. The
foreign automakers report
their sales on a monthly
basis.
General Motors paced the
Sept. 1-10 period, turning in
its best performance since
1971 with sales up .2 per cent
from )ast year and 1976
models accounting for 30 per

oo

NAVYMANKUHL

NAVYMANLOGAN

Two Pomeroy area sailors
are on new class of destroyer
Two Pomeroy area sailors will participate in the commisaloning of the destroyer USS Spruanee, for which a new
destroyer claSij lrrthe U:S. Navy ls being named.
The are Navy Chief Disbursing Clerk Charles J. Kuhl, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Kuhl or Route 3, Pomeroy and Navy
Sonar Technician First Class Dwight E. Logan, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight E. Logan, Sr. of Route 3, Pomeroy. The ship
to be homeported at Norfolk, Is the Navy's lnltlal "Spruance
Class" destroyer, the first major U.S. warship to employ gas
turbine engines, Designed primarily for anti-~Jubmarine
warfare, it is equipped with llle most modern weaponry and
combat systems.
The Spruance is undergoing rigorous shakedown testing in
the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea . It will be officially
inducted into the U.S. Fleet at Pascagoula, Miss., Sept . 20.

open shop

in Pomeroy

Mrs. Culp

appointed
sanitarian

Detroit feeling good

..

~

·.'

Police

,.

Program aims
•
at prevention
The Meigs County Health
Department is offering a
continuing program for the
prevention of childhood
diseases. Sharon lhle, R.N.,
Meigs County Public Heallll
Nurse and Doris Bailey,
L.P .N. , have administered
383 immunizations since
August 11, 1975 when the
Health Department sponsored program began.
This program includes a
series of 10 immunizations for
pre-school and school age
child;en for llle preveption of
Diptheria, Whooping Cough,
Tetanus, Polio, Ghman
Measles
and
common
'
Measles.
The parents of children who

uave not received the full 10
dose series needed for
comp lete immunization
against these formerly kflling
childhood dis!'ases, are urged
to bring their children in for
an update. Infants star t the
immunization series at age
two or three months.
Most schools across Ohio
and the entire country will
not allow non-immunized
students
into
their
classrooms.
The Meigs County Heallll
Department offers this
service at no charge. The cost
of the program is paid for
lllrough local taxes.
The immunization program
is one of many services offered to Meigs Coun ty
residents by the Health
Department in its continuing
·
program to update health
care and prevent diseases
which could endanger llle
normal physical and mental
OONCORD, N.H. (UPI) - . development of children and
New Hampshire voters adults.
Furlller information may
streamed to . the polls in
unexpectedly large numbers be obtained at the Meigs
today, trying for Ute second County Health Department,
1141'. E . Main St., Pomeroy,
time in 10 months to choose
or by calling that office at 992Ute nation's 100th Senator.
Cities where the polls 3723.
The immunization clinic
opened early reported brisk
turnouts by voters seeking to will be open Monday and
end U.S. history's longest Wednesday and every other
election night, which bas Saturday from 8:30 a .m . to 12
dragged on since Nov. 5, 197f. 1100n .
A recount of 223,otio votes, a
challenge and seven months
ot deliberation by the Senate •
itself were Wtable to deter.;nance of showers tonight
mine whether Republican
ending Wednesday, low~
Louis C. Wyman or Democrat
tonight in the low 60s. Highs
John Durkin won history's
Wednesday in the mid 70s.
closest senate election.
Election official Robert Probability Of rain 50 per-cent
today, fq per cent. tonight: 30
(COntinued on page 10)
percent
W~ay.
';
&gt;:

Voters pour
into polls

Weather

'
'.

I '

.·

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51296">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51295">
              <text>September 15, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6076">
      <name>johnston</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
